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Urethral Sterilization With Chlorhexidine Digluconate to Facilitate Primary Repair & Same-Session Implantation

Cairo University (CU) logo

Cairo University (CU)

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 2

Conditions

Penile Prosthesis; Complications

Treatments

Drug: Chlorhexidine gel will be prepared according to an international product Instillagel®

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03614429
1-4-2018

Details and patient eligibility

About

The introduction of penile implants has revolutionized the management of male erectile dysfunction. However, a number of intraoperative complications may occur, which have a major impact on clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction such as bleeding, infection and urethral injury.

Patients undergoing penile implant surgery with fibrotic corpora (e.g., after priapism, after infection, or with Peyronie disease) have a higher risk rates of urethral perforation. This may be related to previous scarring, the difficultly in dilating scarred and fibrotic corpora and its inherent risk of corporal crossover and urethral perforation.

This work examines the efficacy of pre-operative urethral sterilization in rendering the urethra as sterile as the skin of the genital area, with the skin sterilized as per the ISSM guidelines for penile prosthesis implantation, thereby allowing primary repair of urethral injuries should they occur, and implantation in the same setting, without a higher risk of infection.

The study will involve 100 male patients undergoing aseptic surgery (regardless the procedure). Patients will be divided into two groups:

Group 1: control group, n=50 Group 2: Chlorhexidine group (Ch group), n=50 Pre-operatively, urethral instillation with Chlorhexidine gel will be performed for the Ch group, while for the control group, instillation will not be performed.

After conclusion of surgery and with the patient on the operative table, the following swabs will be obtained:

  • A penile skin swab.
  • A urethral swab. Skin and urethral swabs will be compared for bacterial colonization by culture and sensitivity, across the two groups.

Full description

study design Comparative experimental (interventional) study Sample size

The study will involve 100 male patients undergoing aseptic surgery (regardless the procedure). Patients will be divided into two groups:

Group 1: control group, n=50 Group 2: Chlorhexidine group (Ch group), n=50

Pre-operatively, urethral instillation with Chlorhexidine gel will be performed for the Ch group, while for the control group, instillation will not be performed.

Chlorhexidine gel will be prepared according to an international product; Instillagel®, used prior to urethral catheterization as analgesic / anti-septic, with the following composition:

6ml of Instillagel® gel contain: 117.6mg lidocaine hydrochloride, 3.1mg chlorhexidine digluconate, 3.8mg methyl hydroxybenzoate (E218), 1.6mg propyl hydroxybenzoate (E216) 11ml of Instillagel® gel contain: 215.7mg lidocaine hydrochloride, 5.8mg chlorhexidine digluconate, 6.9mg methyl hydroxybenzoate (E218), 2.9mg propyl hydroxybenzoate (E216)

The other ingredients are:

Hyetellose, propylene glycol* (E 1520), sodium hydroxide and purified water. Intra-operatively, the Ch group will receive Chlorhexidine instillation again before surgery, while the control group will not.

For both groups, skin sterilization will be performed according to the ISSM "International Society of Sexual Medicine" guidelines for skin preparation before penile prosthesis surgery (Darren J. Katz et.al 2012)

After conclusion of surgery and with the patient on the operative table, the following swabs will be obtained:

  • A penile skin swab.
  • A urethral swab.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

21 to 50 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male patients aged 20-50 years-old or older undergoing a sterile surgical procedure

Exclusion criteria

  • Unwilling patient for this procedure
  • Patients with history of urethral surgery, urinary calculi, urethral structure, or ongoing pyospermia, prostatitis or pyuria will be excluded, and so will be patients undergoing non-sterile surgeries such as abscess drainage.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Group 1: control group, n=50 Male patients undergoing aseptic surgery (regardless the procedure) Inclusion criteria Male patients aged 20-50 years-old or older undergoing a sterile surgical procedure. Exclusion criteria Unwilling patient for this procedure Patients with history of urethral surgery, urinary calculi, urethral structure, or ongoing pyospermia, prostatitis or pyuria will be excluded, and so will be patients undergoing non-sterile surgeries such as abscess drainage.
Ch group
Experimental group
Description:
Group 2: Chlorhexidine group (Ch group), n=50 Male patients undergoing aseptic surgery (regardless the procedure) Inclusion criteria Male patients aged 20-50 years-old or older undergoing a sterile surgical procedure. Exclusion criteria Unwilling patient for this procedure Patients with history of urethral surgery, urinary calculi, urethral structure, or ongoing pyospermia, prostatitis or pyuria will be excluded, and so will be patients undergoing non-sterile surgeries such as abscess drainage.
Treatment:
Drug: Chlorhexidine gel will be prepared according to an international product Instillagel®

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Osama K Shaeer, M.D., PhD; Islam F.S. Abdelrahman, M.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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