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A Survey of Clinical Trials of Antibiotic Prophylaxis in Colon Surgery: Evidence against Further Use of No-Treatment Controls

List of authors.
  • Mark L. Baum, A.B.,
  • David S. Anish, A.B.,
  • Thomas C. Chalmers, M.D.,
  • Henry S. Sacks, Ph.D., M.D.,
  • Harry Smith, Jr., Ph.D.,
  • and Richard M. Fagerstrom, Ph.D.

Abstract

To evaluate the use of antibiotics given prophylactically in colon surgery, we examined 26 trials published from 1965 to 1980 in which patients given various antibiotic regimens were compared with controls given no antibiotic treatment. In 22 (85 per cent of these trials) antibiotics reduced postoperative wound infection (P<0.05 in 14). Combining the results of the trials published from 1965 to 1975 reveals a 95 per cent confidence interval for the true difference in infection rates of 14±6 per cent (36 per cent for control group vs. 22 per cent for treatment group) and the true difference in death rates of 6.7±4.4 per cent (11.2 per cent for control group vs. 4.5 per cent for treatment group). Yet trials employing control groups given no treatment continue to be reported. Since the use of such controls is justified only when no effective alternative therapy exists, we believe that any further trials of antibiotic prophylaxis in colon surgery should employ a previously proved standard. However, steadily increasing efficacy of treatment means that comparisons of new therapies with standard therapies will become prohibitively expensive because of the large number of patients required. (N Engl J Med. 1981; 305:795–9.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a grant (LM-03116) from the National Library of Medicine and a grant (1 T35 AM-07420) from the National Institutes of Health.

Presented in part at the 37th Annual Meeting of the American Federation for Clinical Research, Washington, D.C, May 11, 1980.

Author Affiliations

From the Office of the Dean and the departments of Medicine and Biomathematical Sciences, Mount Sinai School of Medicine of the City University of New York. Address reprint requests to Dr. Chalmers at the Office of the President and Dean, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029.

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