Covid19 Clinical Trial
— MANCTRA-1Official title:
coMpliAnce With evideNce-based cliniCal Guidelines in the managemenT of Acute biliaRy pancreAtitis
Verified date | April 2021 |
Source | University of Cagliari |
Contact | Mauro Podda, M.D. |
mauropodda[@]ymail.com | |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
Acute pancreatitis (AP) is an inflammatory disease of the pancreas, most commonly caused by gallstones, or excessive use of alcohol. It represents a management challenge and a significant healthcare burden. The incidence of AP ranges globally from 5 to 30 cases per 100.000 inhabitants/year, and there is evidence that the incidence has been rising in recent years. The overall case-fatality rate for AP is roughly 5%, and it is expectedly higher for more severe stages of the disease. In most cases (80%), the outcome of AP is rapidly favorable. However, acute necrotizing pancreatitis (ANP) may develop in up to 20% of cases, and is associated with significant rates of early organ failure (38%), needing some type of surgical/endoscopic intervention (38%) and death (15%). In the United States, AP is a leading cause of inpatient care among gastrointestinal conditions: more than 270.000 patients are hospitalized for AP annually, at an aggregate cost of over 2.5 billion dollars per year. In Europe, the UK incidence of AP is estimated as 15-42 cases per 100.000/year and is rising by 2.7% each year. Despite existing evidence-based practice guidelines for the management of biliary AP, clinical compliance with recommendations is poor, with studies on this field identifying major discrepancies between evidence-based recommendations and daily clinical practice. Audits about biliary AP have been performed in Italy, Germany, France, and England, with quite disappointing results. Indeed, in these audits, the treatment of biliary AP differed substantially from the recommendations. For example, less than 15% of the responders stated that they strictly followed all recommendations included in the guidelines in Germany and 25.8% of patients did not receive definitive treatment for biliary AP within 1 year in the UK. These findings support the view that publication alone of nationally or internationally developed and approved guidelines is insufficient to modify the practice of non-specialists and raises the question of how best to spread guideline recommendations. In 2020, the spread of the virus Covid-19 has represented a pandemic that also had a profound impact on the surgical community. There are many ways through which the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic could have influenced daily clinical practice for patients with biliary AP also leading to a failure to adhere to the recommendations coming from the guidelines, especially those regarding the early and definitive treatment with cholecystectomy or ERCP and sphincterotomy. First of all, the recommendation to postpone all non-urgent endoscopic procedures during the peak of the pandemic. Second, the recommendation to conservatively treat inflammatory conditions such as acute cholecystitis and acute appendicitis wherever possible. Since the clinical compliance with recommendations about AP is poor and the impact of implementing guideline recommendations in biliary AP has not been well studied on a global basis, we launched the MANCTRA-1 study with the aim to demonstrate areas where there is currently a sub-optimal implementation of contemporary guidelines on biliary AP. Moreover, we argue that during the Covid-19 pandemic the tendency to disregard the guidelines recommendations has been more marked than usual and we will try to find out if AP patients' care during the Covid-19 pandemic resulted in a higher rate of adverse outcomes compared to non-pandemic times due to the lack in the compliance of the guidelines. The MANCTRA-1 can identify a number of areas for quality improvement that will require new implementation strategies. Our aim is to summarize the main areas of sub-optimal care to provide the basis for introducing a number of bundles in the management of AP patients to be implemented during the next years. The primary objective of the study is to evaluate which items of the current AP guidelines if disregarded, correlate with negative clinical outcomes according to the different clinical presentations of the disease. Secondary objectives are to assess the compliance of surgeons worldwide to the most up-to-date international guidelines on biliary AP, to evaluate the medical and surgical practice in the management of biliary AP during the non-pandemic (2019) and pandemic Covid-19 periods (2020), and to investigate outcomes of patients with biliary AP treatment during the two study periods.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 600 |
Est. completion date | September 1, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | July 1, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | |
Gender | All |
Age group | 16 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Patients of both sexes, = 16 years old, admitted to any of the participating surgical departments for biliary AP. Exclusion Criteria: - Patients with AP of etiology other than gallstones; Pregnant patients. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Italy | Cagliari University Hospital | Cagliari | |
Italy | Niguarda Hospital Trauma Center - Acute Care Surgery | Milan | |
Spain | Hospital Del Mar Barcelona | Barcelona |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Cagliari | Adolfo Pisanu - University of Cagliari, Cagliari, Ari Leppaniemi - University of Helsinki, Finland, Benedetto Ielpo - HPB Surgery Unit, Hospital del Mar, Barcelona, Chiara Gerardi - Istituto Di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Daniela Pacella - University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Dimitrios Damaskos - Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Fausto Catena - Maggiore Hospital, Parma, Federico Coccolini - General, Emergency and Trauma Surgery, Pisa, Ferdinando Agresta- Vittorio Veneto Civil Hospital, Italy, Francesco Pata - General Surgery Unit, Nicola Giannettasio Hospital, Corigliano-Rossano, Francesco Virdis - Trauma and Acute Care Surgery Unit, Milan, Gaetano Poillucci - Department of Surgery "Paride Stefanini", Rome, Gianluca Pellino - Universitá degli Studi della Campania 'Luigi Vanvitelli', Naples, Kumar Jayant- University of Chicago, USA, Salomone di Saverio -Department of Surgery, Varese, Stavros Gourgiotis - Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, Yoram Kluger - Rambam Health care campus, Haifa |
Italy, Spain,
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* Note: There are 23 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Mortality | 30-day mortality: assessed by the number of AP patients with biliary etiology deceased during the non-pandemic period (2019) and the Covid-19 pandemic period (2020) | 30-day | |
Secondary | Early Cholecystectomy or ERCP and Sphincterotomy | Early definitive treatment rate in 2019 vs. 2020: defined as the number of patients treated in accordance with the current guidelines (cholecystectomy or ERCP with endoscopic sphincterotomy during the same hospital admission or within 2 weeks of discharge) | 2 weeks | |
Secondary | Hospital re-admission | 30-day hospital readmission rate in 2019 vs. 2020: defined as the number of patients re-admitted to the hospital within 30-days from discharge for recurrent biliary AP while awaiting interval cholecystectomy, or due to post-cholecystectomy complications | 30-days | |
Secondary | Morbidity | 30-day morbidity: assessed by the number of AP patients with biliary etiology who experienced any type of AP-related complication within 30-days from the hospital admission during the non-pandemic period (2019) and the Covid-19 pandemic period (2020) | 30-day | |
Secondary | Hospital readmission | 30-day hospital readmission: defined as the number of AP patients with biliary etiology readmitted to hospital in 2019 vs. 2020 within 30-days from discharge for recurrent biliary AP while awaiting interval cholecystectomy. | 30-day |
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