Antibiotic Cement Bead Pouch Versus Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (BeadsvsVac)
Open tíbia Fracture
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Open tíbia Fracture
Eligibility Criteria
The inclusion criteria are: Patients 18 years of age or older. Severe open tibia fracture requiring more than one irrigation and debridement procedure to treat the open fracture. Planned internal or external fixation for definitive fracture management. Formal surgical debridement within 72 hours of their injury. Will have all planned fracture care surgeries performed by a participating surgeon or delegate. Informed consent obtained. The exclusion criteria are: Due to the severity of injury, the treating surgeon does not believe limb salvage >6 months is likely to be successful based on the emergency department or initial intraoperative assessment (prior to enrolment and randomization). Medical contraindication to antibiotic beads. Medical or injury contraindication to NPWT. Injury contraindications could include situations in which the NPWT could not be placed over a vascular graft or exposed neurovascular structure. Received previous surgical debridement or management of their fracture at a non-participating hospital or clinic (as applicable). Chronic or acute infection at or near the fracture site at the time of initial fracture surgery. Incarceration. Women of child-bearing potential who are pregnant or intending to become pregnant within the next 6 months. Currently enrolled in a study that does not permit co-enrollment. Unable to obtain informed consent due to language barriers. Anticipated problems, in the judgment of research personnel, with maintaining follow-up with the patient. Prior enrollment in the trial. Other reason to exclude the patient, as approved by the Methods Center.
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Antibiotic Cement Bead Pouch
Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT)
The antibiotic cement bead pouch involves placing temporary non-absorbable antibiotic-laden cement beads into the open fracture wound and sealing the wound with a large occlusive dressing for prophylaxis against bacteria. The antibiotic beads used will be prepared intraoperatively by the surgical team. The bead recipe will be comprised of a ratio of 2 grams of vancomycin, 2.4 grams of tobramycin, and 40g (one bag) of PMMA cement. The beads will be handmade and approximately 10-mm in diameter. The number of beads placed in the wound will be at the discretion of the treating surgeon based on recipient wound size. As commonly practiced, the antibiotic beads may be exchanged for new beads at each subsequent irrigation and debridement surgery. The number of beads, the number of replaced beads, and the removal of the antibiotic beads will be recorded.
The NPWT system is a sealed dressing placed over the open fracture wound that includes an occlusive plastic wound dressing connected to a vacuum pump, tubing, and a canister to collect fluid. The pump creates a vacuum seal and exerts negative pressure on the wound to remove fluid and maintain a sealed environment. NPWT promotes wound healing through four primary mechanisms: 1) wound shrinkage or macrodeformation; 2) microdeformation at the foam-wound surface interface; 3) fluid removal; and 4) stabilization of the wound environment. 125 mmHg continuous negative pressure is the recommended NPWT device setting; however, the treating surgeon will be allowed to adjust these settings as clinically necessary. The frequency and timing of NPWT changes will also be at the surgeon's discretion but is expected to primarily coincide with the timing of repeat debridement, typically every 24-72 hours until definitive management has occurred.