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Wound Bacterial Microbiota and Their Antibiotic Resistance

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Karolinska Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Leg Injuries
Soft Tissue Injuries
War-Related Injuries
Wounds, Gunshot
Arm Injuries
Wounds, Penetrating
Wounds and Injuries
Wound Infection

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02744144
KISOS002

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of the study is to explore the microbiology in war-associated wounds of hospitalized patients from the Syrian armed conflict. Cultures collected from acute wounds with clinical signs of infection will be analyzed.

Full description

War-associated injuries often result in soft tissue and bone being contaminated with foreign material, leading to infection (Fares et al. 2013; Covey, Lurate, and Hatton 2000). Wound infections remain the greatest risk to life and restoration of function in war-wounded that survive the first few hours (Tong 1972; Murray 2008).

The Syrian armed conflict broke out in 2011 and quickly deteriorated. Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) runs an emergency trauma project in the Ministry of Health hospital in Ar Ramtha, Jordan, less than five kilometers from the Syrian border. At this facility patients from the Syrian armed conflict receive treatment for blast- and gunshot-injuries. Wounds are treated according to the International Committee of the Red Cross war surgery protocol (Giannou and Baldan 2010). Wound management and healing has been difficult and time consuming, often complicated by infections and antibiotic resistance.

Recommendations for treatment of war-associated infections are generally not supported by cohort studies (Murray et al. 2008). High rates of war wound infections caused by antimicrobial drug resistant organisms have been shown in the Middle East but reports generally only include combatants. Due to the use of body armor and forward medical therapy this data may not be applicable to a civilian setting. Furthermore, available studies are either performed on old wounds (Teicher et al. 2014) or on all available culture samples, disregarding infection signs (Sutter et al. 2011; Dau, Tloba, and Daw 2013). Without clinical signs of infection, routine collection of peri-debridement culture samples is inappropriate in war-associated injuries (Murray et al. 2008). The differentiation between contamination and infecting organisms is crucial in order to avoid unnecessary medication, especially limit the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics as overuse may lead to development of multi-drug resistant organisms (Eardley et al. 2011). Cultures collected from acute wounds with clinical signs of infection will be analyzed.

Enrollment

457 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients that receive surgical treatment for war-associated injuries, irrespective of injury location, injury mechanism, time from injury and prior treatment
  • Patients that receive treatment during the study period and are later re-admitted will only be counted as one patient

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients that are only re-admitted during the study period, i.e. patients that received primary treatment by MSF before study initiation

Trial design

457 participants in 2 patient groups

Non-infection
Description:
Patients without clinical infection or positive wound culture
Infection
Description:
Patients with clinical infection and positive wound culture

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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