Breast Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Clinical Trial Investigating the Use of Drains and Quilting Sutures on Seroma Formation Following Mastectomy - A Pilot Study
Seroma formation is a common complication following breast and axillary surgery for breast cancer. The use of drains is commonplace in practice after mastectomy, although there is evidence to suggest that they do not affect the incidence of symptomatic seroma formation. Methods have been adopted in attempts to decrease seroma formation, to varying results, which include the use of deep sutures. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of drains and quilting sutures on the incidence of seroma formation. Patients undergoing mastectomy and axillary surgery for breast cancer will be eligible. Patients will be randomized to either receive a drain, no drain or no drain with quilting sutures. The primary outcome measure will be the incidence of symptomatic seroma. Secondary outcome measures will be postoperative length of stay and postoperative pain scores.
Background: The mainstay of treatment for the majority of breast cancers is surgical
excision of the primary tumour either by removing the lump (wide local excision) or the
whole breast, mastectomy. Breast cancer can commonly spread to the lymph nodes in the armpit
(axilla) meaning surgery to remove the cancer also involves surgery to axilla to sample
lymph nodes. The most common complication following mastectomy is a fluid collection deep to
the wound called a seroma. This is generally a minor complication but may cause significant
discomfort / distress to the patient. If the seroma is of a significant size as to cause
discomfort, it is usually drained using a needle and syringe near the wound. This is not
only to improve patient discomfort, but seromas can lead to wound healing problems which may
delay the onset of adjuvant treatment, such as radio- or chemotherapy. The incidence of
seroma is variable, but the most commonly quoted incidence of seroma formation is between
15% and 27%.
In a bid to reduce seroma formation, surgeons use drains following mastectomy to
theoretically remove any excess fluid that may accumulate following surgery. This is the
current practice in our unit at North Tees. Despite the widespread use of drains following
mastectomy, there is no clear evidence to suggest that the use of drains significantly
reduces seroma formation. There are also no consensus guidelines for the use of
postoperative drains. Most surgeons advocate the removal of drains when the volume drained
is less than 50ml/day. Patients with a drain in-situ may be kept as inpatients until drain
removal, others may go home with drains with frequent review at home by the breast care
nursing team. As a consequence, drains may contribute to a longer postoperative stay and
have also been linked to higher postoperative pain scores.
The nature and behaviour of seromas remains ambiguous; it is hard predicting which patients
will be troubled by them. There is one argument however, that seroma fluid may be increased
by the presence of a drain. This is because the drain may irritate the tissues underneath
the wound, resulting in the tissues producing more fluid which may accumulate into a seroma.
Therefore, there lies a theoretical basis for which drains should be avoided altogether.
Other measures have been adopted other than drains in a bid to reduce seroma formation. One
of the main ones are the use of 'quilting sutures' deep to the wound. These have previously
been used either in addition to a drain or without. Quilting sutures aim to reduce the 'free
space' left in the tissues following removal of the breast by adhering the tissues together.
The free space, commonly called 'dead space' is a risk factor for the accumulation of fluid.
It has been shown in studies that with or without a drain, these sutures (or stitches)
reduce the incidence of seroma and reduce the length of inpatient stay.
Aim/Objective: This pilot study aims to determine the effect that drains and quilting
sutures have on the incidence of symptomatic seroma formation following mastectomy and
axillary surgery for breast cancer. A symptomatic seroma is defined as a fluid collection
beneath the mastectomy wound which develops post-operatively, causing tension on the healing
wound and discomfort to the patient, thus needing drainage. This is usually approximately
100mls or greater in quantity of fluid.
Outcome measures: See below
Population
Eligibility Criteria: see below
Sample size: This is a feasibility study which will recruit patients from four NHS
Foundation Trusts in the North-East of England (North Tees and Hartlepool, Northumbria,
Gateshead and Newcastle Hospitals). The principle research centre will be North Tees. No
power calculation has been used to determine sample size. A small sample will be used to
assess the feasibility of the intervention with the aim of using this study as a pilot for a
large study in the future which would have a sample based on power calculations. Seroma
incidence has been quoted as around 15-27%.2 University Hospital of North Tees and
Hartlepool alone treat approximately 500 patients diagnosed with breast cancer every year.
Each centre will recruit 30 patients, which approximates to 10 per group. This gives a total
sample size of 120 patients.
Subjects will be recruited at the breast clinic when consenting for surgery. They will be
approached regarding the study as part of the consent process.
Randomisation process: Block randomisation using computer generated opaque sealed envelopes
sequencing stratified by the centre. Variable block sizes are preferable but not necessary
given the three arms of the study and multiple study sites. According to site, participants
will be labelled in four blocks of 30 for randomisation to make sure all sites allocate 10
in each group. These will be labelled A1-30 to D1-30. The reasoning for this method is that
if participants were labelled 1-120, then there would be a need for someone who always had
access to the next randomisation group. As this is a pilot study, there would not be the
facility to have a 24-hour randomisation call-line. Participants will be allocated into
either groups 1, 2 or 3 (as detailed below in 'Study Procedure').
Informed written consent: Consent for the study will be taken at the time of consenting for
surgery at the breast clinic. This will be undertaken on a specific consent form. The
patients will also be given an information leaflet at this time, with the option of
returning to another clinic and consenting later.
Study Procedure: Patients eligible and who consent to be subjects in the study will be
randomized into one of three groups and will receive treatment at the hospital at which they
present. Pre-operative practice and operative technique will be standardised between sites
and will be routine practice. Group 1 will be allocated to receive a drain
intra-operatively. Group 2 will not receive a drain and no further intervention. Group 3
will not receive a drain but will receive quilting sutures. A sealed envelope will be opened
by the theatre nursing staff immediately before wound closure to reveal the randomisation
code. Patients in group 2 and 3 and breast care nurses will be blinded regarding the use of
quilting sutures. Surgery will be carried out by consultants or experienced registrars.
Subjects in group 1 will be discharged from hospital when ambulatory and pain is controlled
by oral analgesia. They may go home with the drain in-situ or be discharged when the drain
is removed. The drain in either case will be removed when the output is less than 50ml in
24h. Patients in group 2 and 3 will be discharged when ambulatory and similarly analgesic
requirements are met with oral preparations.
Patients will be followed up in the breast clinic in two weeks post surgery.
Those randomised to not receive a drain (Groups 2 and 3) are not anticipated to have a
longer postoperative inpatient stay. On the contrary, it is anticipated they may be
discharged sooner than those in group 1.
End of the study: The end of the study will be marked when subjects' seromas cease to be
symptomatic or needing drainage. Participants will be followed up routinely within the
breast clinic as part of their on-going cancer management.
Assessment of safety: No additional toxicity data will be required to be included. Any
adverse events or safety issues will be dealt with in accordance with standard hospital
protocol.
Subject withdrawal: Patients will be free to withdraw from the study at any time. This may
be defined as pre or post intervention. The reasons for withdrawal will be noted in the
patient records.
Data recording: Each patient will be assigned a case report form. The patient will be
reviewed at 24h post-operatively and data collected by the clinician. At 24h, data on the
drainage volumes in the drain group, pain scores and an examination of the wound will be
conducted. Pain scores at 48h by the same scoring system will also be used. Pain scores will
be recorded using a validated visual analogue score (VAS). The patient will be reviewed each
day in hospital until discharge. Upon discharge, the breast care nurses will collect data on
seroma incidence, aspiration volumes and wound care. Data will then be entered into a secure
hospital-based Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. Transfer of data will be via NHS.net to NHS.net
email to ensure security.
Statistical considerations: This is a pilot study so only requires small patient numbers
therefore descriptive statistics only will be used.
Source data/documents/confidentiality: The Data Protection Act, NHS Research Governance
Framework and relevant NHS codes of practice will be followed with regards to the
collection, storage, processing and disclosure of personal and study information.
Participants will be given a study number at the onset of the trial, with a link to their
personal data on a separate database. The main data will only be collected in reference to
the unique study number and thus data will be anonymised and kept confidential.
Data will be collected on case report forms. This will then be entered into a secure
hospital-based spreadsheet. The researchers will have access to the data. No patient
identifiable details will be removed from the hospital site. All paper copies will be filed
in a hospital-based master research file. The patient consent form will be filed in the
subjects' hospital records.
As this will be a four-centre study, data will be transferred from the other sites to North
Tees however no patient identifiable information will be transferred only study reference
number. Transfer will be between secure NHS.net email accounts and data will be held for 5
years.
Quality control & quality assurance: This is a low risk trial and no major issues are
anticipated. A formal data monitoring committee is not needed.
Either Consultant Surgeons or highly skilled specialist registrars will carry out the
surgery. Patients will be closely followed up by the surgical team or breast care nurses and
have open access to the breast care service. If however high complication rates are
experienced in a particular group, this method will be stopped.
Quality control will be maintained by strict adherence to the study protocol, the principles
of GCP, research governance and clinical trial regulations.
Ethical considerations : The main ethical issue surrounding this trial is that two thirds of
patients will not receive the current practice at the four trusts, of receiving a drain.
However, this is not to suggest that by not receiving a drain, they will have a less
favourable outcome. The main risk to patients is a symptomatic seroma, which may require
drainage. However, patients are at risk of seromas whether they have a drain put in or not,
and by actually not receiving a drain, may have a lower incidence of seroma, less pain and
time in hospital.
There will be strict compliance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and
MRC/ICH good clinical practice.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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