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Sternal Closure in High-BMI Patients: Cable vs Wire

S

Samsun University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Median Sternotomy
Cardiac Surgery
Sternal Wound Complications
Obesity (Body Mass Index >30 kg/m2)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07097272
SamsunKVC SCW

Details and patient eligibility

About

This retrospective study compares two sternal closure techniques-standard stainless-steel wires and rigid cable systems-in adult patients with a body mass index (BMI) ≥30 who underwent open-heart surgery between January 1, 2020, and December 31, 2024. The study aims to evaluate the incidence of sternal instability, wound infections, reoperation, and length of stay in the intensive care unit and hospital. Findings may help inform surgical decision-making for high-BMI patients.

Full description

Elevated body-mass index (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m²) is an established risk factor for sternal wound complications after median sternotomy, yet consensus is lacking on the optimal closure technique in this high-risk subgroup. Conventional monofilament stainless-steel wiring remains the worldwide standard because it is inexpensive and familiar, but multifilament cable systems provide greater fatigue strength and more uniform load distribution in bench testing and early clinical reports. Previous meta-analyses report conflicting results-some indicating fewer sternal complications with rigid fixation, others showing no clear benefit-largely because they pool heterogeneous populations in which obesity is often only one of many overlapping risk factors. The present study isolates the effect of BMI by retrospectively analysing all adult patients (≥18 years) with BMI ≥ 30 kg/m² who underwent primary open-heart surgery at a single tertiary centre from 1 January 2020 through 31 December 2024. Patients are stratified by the sternal closure method actually used-standard simple/figure-of-eight wires versus a commercially available rigid cable system (RTI Surgical Sternal Cable). By excluding other indications for rigid fixation (eg, age ≥ 80, dialysis, osteoporosis, COPD, bilateral internal mammary harvest, mediastinitis, early re-exploration, re-do sternotomy), the analysis aims to discern whether obesity alone modifies the relative performance of the two techniques. De-identified peri-operative data are extracted from electronic records under institutional ethics approval, and pre-specified statistical comparisons will quantify associations between closure method and postoperative sternal instability, surgical site infection, need for reoperation, and resource utilisation (ICU and total hospital length of stay). Findings are expected to refine evidence-based recommendations for sternal closure in high-BMI cardiac-surgery patients.

Enrollment

110 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age ≥18 years
  2. Body Mass Index (BMI) ≥30 kg/m²
  3. Underwent primary open-heart surgery via median sternotomy
  4. Sternal closure performed with either standard stainless-steel wire or multifilament sternal cable system
  5. Complete and accessible perioperative clinical records

Exclusion criteria

  1. Age ≥80 years
  2. End-stage renal disease or chronic hemodialysis
  3. Redo sternotomy
  4. Early postoperative re-exploration (within 7 days)
  5. Mediastinitis prior to index discharge
  6. Diabetic patients with bilateral internal mammary artery (IMA) harvest
  7. Diagnosed osteoporosis
  8. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (FEV₁ <80% and FEV₁/FVC <70%)

Trial design

110 participants in 2 patient groups

standard wire group
Description:
Patients with BMI ≥30 who underwent median sternotomy and had sternal closure using standard stainless-steel wire.
cable system group
Description:
Patients with BMI ≥30 who underwent median sternotomy and had sternal closure using the RTI Surgical Sternal Cable System.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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