NYMC Faculty Publications

Project Prevent: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Preoperative Vaginal Metronidazole to Decrease Patient Issues and Infections After Hysterectomy

Author Type(s)

Faculty, Resident/Fellow

DOI

10.1136/bmjsit-2023-000241

Journal Title

BMJ Surgery, Interventions, & Health Technologies

First Page

e000241

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2024

Department

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate if vaginal metronidazole for 5 days before hysterectomy decreases postoperative infections and patient issues. DESIGN: This randomized trial compared vaginal metronidazole for 5 days before a scheduled hysterectomy to no intervention. Sample size calculation was based on a 20% difference in issues and infection (30% incidence and 10% in the intervention arm) with 80% power and an alpha error of 0.05 and indicated 62 subjects needed in each arm. SETTING: Outpatient gynecology clinics at a single academic institution. PARTICIPANTS: 154 subjects were screened for eligibility between July 2020 and September 2022. 133 underwent hysterectomy including 68 subjects (51.1%) randomized to the metronidazole and 65 (48.9%) controls. Overall, the population was racially and ethnically diverse. There was no significant difference in characteristics between the two groups. INTERVENTIONS: Vaginal metronidazole for 5 days before hysterectomy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Postoperative patient issues and documented postoperative infections at 4-8 weeks after surgery. RESULTS: There was no difference in the composite rate of patient-reported issues and/or documented postoperative infection (53/133 (39.8%) with no difference between groups (29/68 (42.6%) vs 24/65 (36.9%), p=0.50). There was no difference in patient-reported issues which was 51/133 (38.3%) with no difference between groups (28/68 (41.2%) vs 23/65 (33.8%), p=0.49) or in documented infections with a rate of 25/133 (18.8%) with no significant difference between groups (15/68 (22.0%) vs 10/65 (15.4%), p=0.33). In the intervention arm, the compliance rate was 73.5% for all 5 days of vaginal metronidazole, and a per-protocol analysis was performed which resulted in no significant difference between groups. CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to suggest a significant benefit of preoperative vaginal metronidazole to prevent surgical site infections and postoperative patient issues in patients undergoing hysterectomy. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04478617.

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