Skin Antisepsis Before Surgical Fixation of Limb Fractures: The PREPARE Trial .
Skin antisepsis before surgical fixation of limb fractures
NEJM. 2024 01-Jan;():.
The PREPARE Trial was a cluster-randomized, crossover trial part of the PREP-IT program, which compared alcohol-based anti-septic solutions of iodine povacrylex vs. chlorhexidine gluconate in operative fracture patients. THE PREPARE Trial included a total of 8485 patients who underwent fracture fixation: 1700 patients with open limb fractures and 6785 with closed lower-limb or pelvic fractures. Randomization occurred at the hospital level. The primary outcome of interest was the incidence of surgical-site infection, which included superficial incisional infections within 30 days and deep incisional or organ-space infections within 60 days post-surgery. Secondary outcomes included unplanned fracture-related reoperations and serious adverse events. The iodone povacrylex group (77/3205; 2.4%) had a lower incidence of surgical site infections compared to chlorhexidine (108/3272; 3.3%) in closed-fracture patients [OR, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.55 to 1.00; p=0.049]. The rates were similar in open-fracture patients between the iodine (54/3272; 6.5%) and chlorhexidine (60/3272; 7.3%) [OR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.58 to 1.27; p=0.45]. In the closed-fracture group, 5.5% in the iodine group and 5.9% in the chlorhexidine group underwent unplanned reoperations [OR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.77 to 1.20]. In the open-fracture group, the figures were 16.1% for iodine and 14.5% for chlorhexidine [OR, 1.16; 95% CI, 0.87 to 1.54]. The results of this trial suggest that an iodine-alcohol solution for pre-operative skin antisepsis could reduce the risk of surgical site infection in closed fracture patients, but may not provide any benefit over chlorhexidine-alcohol solutions for open fracture patients.
Unlock the Full ACE Report
You have access to 4 more FREE articles this month.
Click below to unlock and view this ACE Reports
Unlock Now
Critical appraisals of the latest, high-impact randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews in orthopaedics
Access to OrthoEvidence podcast content, including collaborations with the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, interviews with internationally recognized surgeons, and roundtable discussions on orthopaedic news and topics
Subscription to The Pulse, a twice-weekly evidence-based newsletter designed to help you make better clinical decisions
Exclusive access to original content articles, including in-house systematic reviews, and articles on health research methods and hot orthopaedic topics