Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This clinical trial is an exploratory clinical trial that evaluates the necessity and effectiveness of empirical antibiotic use in mild and moderate acute inflammatory gallbladder diseases that require surgery, and the incidence of postoperative infection-related complications is compared.


Clinical Trial Description

Cholecystectomy is the standard treatment for acute cholecystitis, accompanied by pain and fever due to acute inflammation in cholelithiasis patients. Empirical antibiotics are generally used to treat inflammation and prevent exacerbation before and after surgery. According to a previous study that confirmed the use of empirical antibiotics (JAMA. 2014;312(2):145-154. doi:10.1001/jama.2014.7586), the incidence of infectious complications was 15% in the group that used empirical antibiotics, and 15% of those who did not use empirical antibiotics The incidence of infectious complications in the group was 17%, confirming that there was no significant difference between the two groups. Based on these results, it was confirmed that the use of antibiotics after surgery was not clinically effective in reducing postoperative complications of infection. However, there is a lack of objective research and evidence on the efficacy of empirical antibiotic use, and the use of antibiotics that have not been proven in practice may lead to the extension of hospital stay, waste of medical resources, and an increase in medical expenses. In addition, it can cause the occurrence of multidrug-resistant bacteria, which has been revived due to many problems recently, so caution is required in its use. If the same anti-inflammatory effect and postoperative results can be obtained only through surgical treatment in mild and moderate acute inflammatory gallbladder disease, it is expected that the indiscriminate use of antibiotics will be reduced, and side effects thereof will be prevented. Therefore, this study intends to determine the effective and rational use of antibiotics through randomized clinical trials according to empirical antibiotics in laparoscopic surgery for patients with acute cholecystitis without evidence of systemic infection. In addition, a multicenter, double-blind, prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial according to the use of empirical antibiotics has not been conducted in Korea so far, and thus clinical usefulness is expected to be great. study population 1. Inclusion criteria - 19 years old or older - less than 70 years old - Those with mild (grade I by Tokyo guidelines) and severe (Grade Ⅱ) acute cholecystitis among the acute cholecystitis patient group - Cholecystitis with adhesions with surrounding organs due to gallbladder wall thickness of 4 mm or more or gallbladder inflammation - Those who voluntarily sign the written consent form after hearing and understanding the explanation of this clinical trial 2. Exclusion criteria - Those who are scheduled for elective gallbladder surgery (chronic cholecystitis, etc.) - Gallbladder disease that is not an inflammatory disease (GB cancer, GB polyp) - Pregnant or lactating women - A person who performs surgery at the same time due to other organ diseases - Those with immune suppression and bleeding tendency - Those who underwent percutaneous biliary drainage (PTGBD) before surgery - Those who require drainage tube installation during surgery - Those who are hypersensitive to cephalosproline antibiotics - Those who participated in other clinical trials within 3 months before screening - Other investigators who are judged inappropriate to participate in this clinical trial 3. Target number of subjects and calculation basis Since this study was a comparison with a reference drug, the number of subjects was calculated using a non-inferiority test. To calculate the number of study subjects, in the existing literature, the incidence of surgical site infection was 15% in the group using antibiotics and 17% in the group not using antibiotics. The difference value of the ratio between the two groups was 2% larger in the test group than in the control group, and the study subjects were calculated assuming 11%, the upper limit of the confidence interval between the two groups, as the non-inferiority margin. As a result, 166 subjects in each group are required, 10%. If the dropout rate is calculated, 185 per group, a total of 370 subjects, is required. Study design 1. Design of clinical trials This clinical trial is an exploratory clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of using empirical antibiotics in mild and moderate acute inflammatory gallbladder disease requiring surgery. After determining whether the selection/exclusion criteria are suitable on the day of surgery, only suitable subjects are randomly assigned to the test group and control group in a 1:1 ratio. For the control group, the clinical investigational drug (Cefazolin 1g) was administered through an intravenous injection within 1 hour before the surgical site incision so that the concentration of antibiotics could be sufficiently maintained at the time of incision at the surgical site and the test group was administered with physiological saline without antibiotics do. Empirical antibiotics and saline are administered repeatedly at 24-hour intervals from the first dose until the patient is discharged. On the day of operation (OP day) and discharge, adverse reaction investigations, laboratory tests, and physical examinations for safety and efficacy evaluation are performed to evaluate the postoperative pain level and hospitalization period. One week after discharge, an outpatient visit is performed to evaluate adverse reactions, laboratory tests, and physical examinations to evaluate postoperative pain, the occurrence of postoperative infection-related complications, complications other than infection, and the need for additional procedures. In addition, when visiting the emergency room due to infection-related complications within a month after discharge, evaluate and compare the degree of postoperative pain, readmission, complications other than infection, and the need for additional procedures. 2. Method of subject registration and randomization Subjects who have listened to the explanation of this clinical trial and agreed to voluntarily participate in the trial will be given a subject identification code in the order in which they signed the consent form at the screening visit. Randomization is performed to ensure the scientific validity of clinical trials by ensuring that the subjectivity of the investigator is not involved in the assignment. Block randomization is performed to divide the patients into 2 groups and allocate them in a 1:1 ratio for patients who satisfy the selection/exclusion criteria and agree to participate in the clinical trial. For randomization, a statistician independent of this clinical trial generates a randomization number using SAS ver.9.4 for Microsoft Windows (SAS Institute Inc, NC, Cary, USA) or higher and assigns them sequentially. Method of operation 1. Surgery was started under general anesthesia 2. A trocar of 10 mm was placed on the navel, 5 mm under the blade, and 5 mm trocar was placed on the right upper abdomen. 3. Pneumoperitoneum was performed using CO2 gas in the abdominal cavity. - Double pressure through CO2 gas was maintained at 12mmHg / and 2L / min. 4. Dissection started from Calot's triangle, and the operation was performed by retrograde cholecystectomy. - The cystic duct was ligated with a 10mm clip, and the cystic artery was also ligated with a 10mm clip. - If the cystic duct was unstably ligated, ligation was performed through an end loop. - After ligation, the gallbladder was dissected from the liver. 5. Washed the surgical site. 6. The excised gallbladder was placed in a laparoscopic pocket and extracted through the umbilicus. 7. The trocar was removed, the skin was sutured, and the operation was completed. characteristics of observational and clinical test - Hematology tests: Hematocrit, Hemoglobin, Platelet, WBC & Differential count - Blood coagulation test: PT INR, aPTT, BT - Blood chemistry test: SGOT (AST), SGPT (ALT), alkaline phosphatase, γ-GTP, bilirubin (total / direct), fasting plasma glucose, BUN, creatinine, sodium, potassium, chloride, total protein, albumin, uric acid, CPK, LDH, CRP - Imaging medical examination - Postoperative hospital stay - Check for infection. - Check for leakage of bile. - Surgery time and bleeding amount were described. - Postoperative complications Statistical analysis In the case of categorical variables for the length of stay, surgical time, and complication data obtained as secondary endpoints, n (%) was presented, and the ratio difference between the two groups was tested using Chi-square or Fisher's exact test. In addition, for continuous variables, the mean, standard deviation, median, minimum, and maximum values were presented. The normality test was performed to test with Student's t-test for normal distribution and the non-normal distribution Wilcoxon rank-sum test. The difference between the two groups would be tested. All statistical analyses would use SPSS version 21.0, and it would be judged that it was statistically significant below the significance level of 0.05. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05339282
Study type Interventional
Source Seoul St. Mary's Hospital
Contact Tae ho Hong, MD. PhD
Phone +82-10-5206-5266
Email gshth@catholic.ac.kr
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 1, 2022
Completion date April 30, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03767881 - AXIOS™ for Gallbladder Drainage as an Alternative to Percutaneous Drainage IDE N/A
Recruiting NCT05975385 - Acupuncture for Prevention of Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting After Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy N/A
Completed NCT03470220 - The Role of Ultrasound in Cholecystitis
Recruiting NCT02972944 - Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy or Conservative Treatment in the Acute Cholecystitis of Elderly Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT05702775 - Endosonography-guided Gallbladder Drainage vs Non-endoscopic Treatment in Inoperable Acute Cholecystitis N/A
Recruiting NCT04542512 - Risk Factors for Necrotic Cholecystitis During COVID-19 Pandemic.
Recruiting NCT04103762 - Interest of Intravenous Cholangiography With Indocyanine Green in the Context of Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy for Grade 1 and 2 Acute Gallstone Cholecystitis N/A
Completed NCT03014817 - Ultrasonically Activated Scalpel Versus Electrocautery Based Dissection in Acute Cholecystitis Trial N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04612413 - A Phase 2 Study Evaluating Efficacy, Safety and Tolerability of Different Doses and Regimens of Allocetra-OTS for the Treatment of Organ Failure in Adult Sepsis Patients Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT04167072 - Observation vs Early Removal of LAMS in EUS Guided Cholecystoenterostomy N/A
Completed NCT04874103 - Hong Kong Follow up Protocol After EUS Gallbladder Drainage for Acute Cholecistitis
Completed NCT05041686 - Usefulness of the CADISS® System for the Cleavage of Severe Adhesions in Cholecystectomy N/A
Recruiting NCT06330688 - Prospective Evaluation of Ultrasound-guided Percutaneous Cholecystostomy With the Trocar Technique
Completed NCT02619149 - Piperacllin Versus Placebo in Patients Undergoing Surgery for Acute Cholecystitis Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT04661371 - Necessity of Preoperative Empirical Antibiotic Use in Acute Cholecystitis N/A
Completed NCT03050242 - Benefits of Glycopyrrolate on Intubation With Rigid-videostylet (OptiScope®) N/A
Completed NCT06178848 - EEG Parameters Between Remimazolam- and Propofol-based Anesthesia N/A
Completed NCT02394327 - Endoscopic Nasogallbladder Drainage Versus Gallbladder Stenting Before Cholecystecomy N/A
Completed NCT05179629 - M-Tapa Block for Laparoscopic Cholesistectomy N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03021447 - Prediction of Postoperative Pain by Injection Pain of Propofol N/A