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Current clinical trials

What is a clinical trial?

Clinical trials study the safety and effectiveness of interventions and procedures on people’s health. Interventions may include medications, radiation, foods or behaviours, such as exercise. Usually, the treatments in clinical trials are studied in a laboratory and sometimes in animals before they are studied in humans. The goal of clinical trials is to find new and better ways of preventing, diagnosing and treating disease.

Current Clinical Trials


HIBISCUS

NINJA2

STRC. Trial Concluded

AN ANALYSIS OF THE IMPACT OF COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH ON AUSTRALASIAN SURGERY

An analysis of the impact of collaborative research on Australasian Surgery.

optiTHERMM. Trial Concluded

A survey of practice in burns thermoregulation

Perioperative hypothermia has been shown to be associated with poor patient outcomes including an increased mortality rate.  Patients with major burns are at a particularly high risk of perioperative hypothermia but there is no universally recognised international standard for the monitoring and management of patient body temperature around the time of surgery.

The primary outcome is the consensus concerning the major burn patient body temperature which is deemed to be safe during surgery and in the perioperative period.

CIPHUR. Trial Concluded

Chlorhexidine Gluconate versus Povidone-Iodine Skin Antisepsis Prior to Upper Limb Surgery (CIPHUR)

An international, multicentre prospective service evaluation of topical hand antisepsis solution use in hand surgery.

In 2016, the NHS commissioned 196,016 operations for hand conditions, of which 58% were elective. Surgical site infection (SSI) is the most common and costly postoperative complication. Given that 1-35% of hand surgery patients develop SSI and the impending crisis surrounding antimicrobial resistance11, there is a need to reduce SSI following hand surgery.

The World Health Organisation (WHO), United States of America Centre for Disease Control (CDC) and United Kingdom National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommend alcoholic chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) for preoperative skin preparation to reduce the risk of SSI

To evaluate current upper limb surgery services and SSI rates in the UK, a prospective audit is required.

CANVAS. Trial Concluded

  • CANVAS – international, multicentre prospective service evaluation & survey of non-absorbable vs absorbable suture use after skin lesion excision.
  • Survey of non absorbable vs absorbable suture use after skin lesion excision

PRESET. Trial Concluded

A modified Delphi process for research prioritisation in Australasian plastic surgery.

Clinical Trials

Clinical Trial participation

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