Appendicitis (Diagnosis)
Conditions
Keywords
Cefoxitin, Appendectomy, Surgical Site Infections
Brief summary
This research is studying a drug called cefoxitin already approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reduce the risk of infection after surgery to remove an appendix. Researchers are studying a large group of people to continue to learn how best to dose antibiotics. This research will compare the current standard treatment which is a single dose prior to surgery to a new method that includes adding another dose of cefoxitin within 30 minutes of starting the surgery. This study will measure cefoxitin concentrations in blood, fat, and appendix tissue samples to compare the standard dosing method to our new method. This information will help us figure out the right dose of this drug to prevent infection after surgery to remove an appendix.
Detailed description
This interventional, phase 1 study aims to improve surgical site infection (SSI) prevention in patients undergoing appendectomy for uncomplicated appendicitis. Despite standard antibiotic prophylaxis, SSI rates remain high, with a pelvic abscess risk of 9.4%. Current prophylactic antibiotic regimens may not achieve optimal tissue concentrations, especially in fat and appendix tissue. This study will evaluate the probability of target attainment (PTA) of cefoxitin, cefuroxime, and metronidazole in plasma, subcutaneous fat, and appendix tissue. A cohort of 46 adult patients will be randomized to receive standard-of-care antibiotics with or without an additional cefoxitin dose. Antibiotic concentrations will be measured in collected blood, fat, and appendix samples. The study's primary objective is to determine whether a supplemental cefoxitin dose improves PTA compared to standard prophylaxis. Population pharmacokinetic modeling will validate the intervention's effectiveness in optimizing antibiotic exposure and reducing SSI risk. The results may inform future precision antibiotic dosing strategies for appendectomy and other acute care surgeries. Primary Outcome Measure: Probability of achieving 50% time above 8 mcg/mL (cefuroxime or cefoxitin) in appendix tissue between intervention and standard care groups. Study Design: Randomized, interventional, phase 1 study Enrollment: 46 participants Inclusion: Adults (\>18 years) undergoing appendectomy for acute appendicitis Exclusion: Pregnant individuals, prisoners, patients with perforation or abscess This study seeks to improve perioperative antibiotic management, reducing SSI rates while minimizing unnecessary antibiotic exposure and resistance development.
Interventions
Cefoxitin 2000 mg Bolus Injection
Sponsors
Study design
Intervention model description
This is an interventional phase 1 study design that includes human adult participants undergoing an appendectomy. The study entails collection and analysis of three blood (plasma) samples, two subcutaneous fat samples, and appendix tissue samples from resected surgical specimens. The intervention is to receive the standard of care surgical prophylaxis or the standard of care surgical prophylaxis plus the addition of cefoxitin 2000 mg within 30 minutes of incision
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Diagnosis of acute appendicitis and plan to undergo appendectomy at the University of Michigan
Exclusion criteria
* Prisoners * Patients that are pregnant * Patients with perforation or abscess on CT Scan
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Probability of Achieving Optimal Antibiotic Concentration in Appendix Tissue | 4 hours | The probability of achieving 50% time above 8 mcg/mL (cefuroxime or cefoxitin) in appendix tissue in the intervention compared to the non-intervention (standard of care) arm. |
Countries
United States
Contacts
University of Michigan