Nasal Iodine Swab Versus Oral Antibiotic to Prevent Surgical Site Infection After Undergoing Mohs… (NCT06207786) | Clinical Trial Compass
WithdrawnNot Applicable
Nasal Iodine Swab Versus Oral Antibiotic to Prevent Surgical Site Infection After Undergoing Mohs Micrographic Surgery
Stopped: Lack of resources to support the trial
0Started 2024-09-01
Plain-language summary
The purpose of this study is to compare surgical site infection rates for patients treated with Mohs micrographic surgery after bilateral nasal swab with povidone iodine versus standard treatment including the use of a standardized oral antibiotic prophylaxis protocol.
Who can participate
Age range18 Years
SexALL
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Inclusion Criteria:
* Non-pregnant, non-lactating/breastfeeding, non-incarcerated, English-speaking persons undergoing Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) for malignant cutaneous neoplasms and receiving same-day defect repair by the MMS-performing surgeon
* Able to provide written informed consent prior to initiation of any study-specific procedures
* Able to swallow, retain, and absorb oral medications
* All malignant cutaneous neoplasms will be included
Exclusion Criteria:
* On antibiotic treatment or established intolerance or contraindication to povidone-iodine
* Allergy to specific oral antibiotics that are utilized as part of the Mayo Clinic Antibiotic Prophylaxis protocol (cefalexin, azithromycin, clindamycin)
* Requiring oral antibiotic therapy for prophylaxis postoperative infectious endocarditis or hematogenous total joint infection
* Cases where skin reconstruction is performed with non-sterile gloves
* Patients with lesions on the legs, as dilute vinegar soaks are standard practice and this would be a confounder for preventing surgical site infection
* Patients at increased risk for severe infections, including patients on immunosuppressive medications and biologics, patients with a history of HIV infection, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, immunodeficiency syndromes, as well as patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
What they're measuring
1
Effectiveness of nasal decolonization with povidone-iodine versus a standardized oral antibiotic prophylaxis protocol to prevent surgical site infection (SSI)