No registrations found.
ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
C. acnes on the skin of the shoulder
Sponsors and support
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
Presence of C. acnes on the skin of the shoulder, by means of skin cultures (present if detected on at least one out of three skin swabs) [0/1]
Secondary outcome
- Presence of other pathogens/skin flora on the skin of the shoulder, by means of skin cultures (present if detected on at least one out of three skin swabs) [0/1]
- Adverse events of the benzoylperoxide gel (redness, dry skin, itching, burning feeling, etc.) [0/1]
Background summary
Rationale: Cutibacterium acnes (C. acnes) is one of the most frequent pathogens of infections after shoulder surgery. C. acnes colonization is greater in the shoulder epidermis compared to other regions of the body due to the high presence of sebaceous glands where C. acnes resides in. This bacterium can cause low-grade infections following shoulder surgery, which are difficult to diagnose and can lead to pain, stiffness and even failure of the prosthesis. Standard surgical skin disinfection and preparation in combination with intravenous prophylactic antibiotics do not seem to be effective on reducing the bacterial load of C. acnes, because they do not penetrate the membrane of the sebaceous glands. If a relatively simple preoperative intervention, such as application of a gel on the skin to be operated, can reduce the presence of C. acnes, this will probably lead to less postoperative infections. Consequently, it will improve the well-being of the patients and reduce additional health-care costs.
Objective: To evaluate if topical benzoyl peroxide reduces the presence of C. acnes on the skin of the shoulder compared to a topical placebo.
Study design and population: Double-blind randomised placebo-controlled trial including healthy human volunteers between 40-80 years old. Three baseline skin swabs will be taken to determine if C. acnes is present on the skin of the shoulder and patient characteristics will be gathered. Participants with C. acnes on the skin of the shoulder will be randomized into the benzoylperoxide or placebo group and are then requested to apply the gel 5 times during 2 days. Thereafter, three skin swabs will be taken to determine if C. acnes is present after the use of the gel (benzoylperoxide or placebo) and information about adverse events will be collected.
Study objective
Topical benzoyl peroxide, applied on 5 consecutive moments by participants with positive baseline cultures for C. acnes, will reduce the number of positive skin cultures with 50% or more
Study design
T0: first appointment (baseline skin swabs, patient characteristics)
T1: second appointment (follow-up skin swabs, adverse events), approximately 3 weeks after T0.
Intervention
5 times application of benzoylperoxide (Benzoylperoxide TEVA 50 MG/G, Hydrogel, Teva Nederland B.V. Haarlem, The Netherlands)
Placebo: Carbomeerwatergel 1% FNA, Hydrogel, Fagron NL B.V. Capelle aan den Ijssel, The Netherlands
Floor M. van Diek
+ 31 (0)24 365 9140
f.vandiek@gmail.com
Floor M. van Diek
+ 31 (0)24 365 9140
f.vandiek@gmail.com
Inclusion criteria
- Healthy volunteer who is willing to be participate during the course of 2 months.
- Age range: 40-80 years old
- Living independently
- Instructable
- Able to apply ointmentgel
- C. acnes present on the skin of the shoulder
Exclusion criteria
- Antibiotic use in the past 2 months
- Previous surgery on one or both shoulders
- Corticosteroids infiltration in the right shoulder in the past 3 months
- Allergy for benzoylperoxide
- Already using benzoylperoxide
- Usage of tretinoin or adapalene
- Pregnant
- Breastfeeding
Design
Recruitment
IPD sharing statement
Plan description
Followed up by the following (possibly more current) registration
Other (possibly less up-to-date) registrations in this register
No registrations found.
In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL7627 |
CCMO | NL63995.091.17 |
OMON | NL-OMON48905 |