Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Breast cancer is the most frequent type of cancer among Swiss women (5'700 cases diagnosed every year). Mastectomy is indicated when breast conservative surgery is not possible or by patient wish. Axillary lymph nodes dissection (ALND) is indicated primarily for node-positive breast cancer. Postoperative seroma after mastectomy and axillary clearance is a common complication, occurring in 25 to more than 60% of patients with breast cancer. After mastectomy and/or ALND conventional wound closure commonly uses suction drain to prevent seroma. However, seroma frequently occurs after drain removal. Excessive fluid accumulation in seroma stretches the skin, resulting in patient discomfort, impaired ipsilateral shoulder function and higher risk of surgical site infection and prolongs the hospitalization. In rare cases, a fibrous encapsulated seroma is resistant to conservative treatment and requires surgical resection. Thus, seroma may also impact health care costs requiring longer hospital stay or unplanned outpatient visits and may delay adjuvant therapy. Recent data suggest that quilting suture through flap fixation reduces the incidence of seroma. Therefore, quilting suture has the potential to increase patients' quality of life, as well as to shorten the length of hospital stay and to reduce hospital costs, providing the rationale for this study.The aim of our project is to compare the efficacy of quilting suture with that of conventional closure without quilting in reducing the drainage quantity, the length of hospitalisation and the prevalence of seroma following mastectomy and/or axilla for breast cancer, as well as the patient reported pain increasing patient quality of life. The final goal is the omission of axillary drainage in the future. All randomised patients will be followed for 12 weeks. Patients will fill in 2 questionnaires (EQ5-D: European Quality of Life and Brief Pain Inventory: BPI). The Health Economic Analysis form (HEA) will be completed by the investigator collecting the patient data. Total duration of study: 2.5 years. There are 2 treatments groups 50% of the study participants will be treated with quilting suture and 50% with conventional closure. Patients are randomly divided into the 2 groups. All patients are blinded to the surgical treatment.This means that they do not know which surgical treatment they have received (quilting suture or conventional closure), The operating surgeon will not see the after the operation. Seroma assessment will be performed by other medical personnel, that do not know which surgical treatment has been given. In case of seroma a physician (not the operating surgeon) will perform the aspiration of seroma if needed.


Clinical Trial Description

Breast cancer is the most frequent type of cancer among Swiss women (5'700 cases diagnosed every year). Mastectomy is indicated when breast conservative surgery is not possible or by patient wish. Axillary lymph nodes dissection (ALND) is indicated primarily for node-positive breast cancer. Postoperative seroma after mastectomy and axillary clearance is a common complication, occurring in 25 to more than 60% of patients with breast cancer. After mastectomy and/or ALND conventional wound closure commonly uses suction drain to prevent seroma. However, seroma frequently occurs after drain removal. Excessive fluid accumulation in seroma stretches the skin, resulting in patient discomfort, impaired ipsilateral shoulder function and higher risk of surgical site infection and prolongs the hospitalisation. In rare cases, a fibrous encapsulated seroma is resistant to conservative treatment and requires surgical resection. Thus, seroma may also impact health care costs requiring longer hospital stay or unplanned outpatient visits and may delay adjuvant therapy. Recent data suggest that quilting suture through flap fixation reduces the incidence of seroma. Therefore, quilting suture has the potential to increase patients' quality of life, as well as to shorten the length of hospital stay and to reduce hospital costs The aim of this trial is to compare the efficacy of quilting suture of the dead space at the pectoral area and/or axilla with that of conventional suture in reducing the total volume of post-mastectomy and/or axillary drainage and seroma in female patients after surgical treatment of breast cancer.The study seeks primarily to determine if quilting suture compared to conventional suture after mastectomy/ALND reduces the total volume of axillary drainage until drain removal. This single blind randomised phase III controlled superiority trial compares 2 surgical techniques: quilting suture and conventional suture. Patients will be assigned to one of 2 parallel groups: Arm A: quilting suture and Arm B: (no quilting suture): conventional wound closure. Duration of accrual: 2 years - Duration of trial treatment: 1 day (surgery). Surgery procedure: Mastectomies or ALND dissections using a standardized technique, with multiple quilting sutures in the site of the mastectomy/in the dissected axilla or conventional closure without quilting. In both procedures placement of one drain into the breast and axilla or in the axillary cavity. All randomised patients will be followed for 12 weeks. Patients will fill in 2 questionnaires (Quality of Life: EQ5-D and Brief Pain Inventory: BPI). The Health Economic Analysis form (HEA) will be completed by the investigator collecting the patient data. At the study visits the following examinations will be performed: physical examination, blinded assessment of seroma, axillary drain volume, adverse events and surgical site infections. The sample size is based on the primary endpoint, the total volume of axillary drainage. We assume a reduction in the total volume of axillary drainage of 200 ml in the intervention arm (application of quilting sutures) compared to the control arm (no application of sutures), which is based on literature and actual measurements in 14 patients. A total of 106 patients (53 in each group) will yield a power of 80% to detect this difference at a two-sided significance level of 0.05. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03902977
Study type Interventional
Source Lindenhofgruppe AG
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date February 19, 2019
Completion date October 1, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03080623 - Ultrasound-based Diagnostic Model for Differentiating Malignant Breast Lesion From Benign Lesion
Completed NCT05527769 - Pain and Functional Recovery After Mastectomy and IBR by Implant: Prepectoral Versus Subpectoral Technique
Completed NCT06376578 - Exercise Interventions for Improving Health in Breast Cancer Survivors N/A
Completed NCT03004534 - A Study to Evaluate Changes in Human Breast Cancer Tissue Following Short-Term Use of Darolutamide Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05020574 - Microbiome and Association With Implant Infections Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT06277141 - The Vitality Mammography Messaging Study N/A
Completed NCT03555227 - USG PECS vs LIA for Breast Cancer Surgery N/A
Completed NCT03270111 - High Physical Activity During a Weight Loss Intervention for Breast Cancer Survivors and High Risk Women N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03917082 - Limited Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy for Low Risk Breast Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05561842 - Tablet-based Mobile Health Ultrasound for Point-of-care Breast Cancer Diagnosis in Nigeria (Mobile Health: Technology and Outcomes in Low and Middle-Income Countries)
Completed NCT04554056 - Trial to Compare the Efficacy and Safety Of MW05 and PEG-rhG-CSF Phase 2/Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT03127995 - Hypofractionated vs Standard Radiotherapy in Breast Cancer With an Indication for Regional Lymph Node Irradiation About Lymphedema Occurrence N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02237469 - Prone Breast Radiotherapy Treatment Planning Observational Study
Completed NCT01204125 - Two Regimens of SAR240550/Weekly Paclitaxel and Paclitaxel Alone as Neoadjuvant Therapy in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Patients Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04565054 - Adjuvant Therapy With Abemaciclib + SOC ET vs. SOC ET in Clinical or Genomic High Risk, HR+/HER2- EBC Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06412133 - Conversations in Light and Shadow: Assessing Phototherapy's Impact on Breast Cancer Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT03956641 - Evolution of the Physical Condition in Treated Cancer Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT06087120 - Investigate the Prognostic and Predictive Value of ctDNA During Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer.
Recruiting NCT06058936 - Exercises Using Virtual Reality on Cancer Patients N/A
Completed NCT03470935 - Non-interventional Study Evaluating Gynecological Impact of Diagnosis and Treatment of Breast Cancer in Patients Younger