Gastrointestinal Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Oral Resveratrol Before ERCP Redused Overall Pancreatitis in Patients Undergoing Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP): A Multi-center, Single-blinded, Randomized Controlled Trial
Acute pancreatitis is the most common and feared complication of ERCP, occurring after 1% to 30% of procedures. Since 2012, a multicenter RCT was published in NEJM, indomethacin use in high risk patients was considered a "standard" method to prevent PEP. However, the risk factors of PEP is not fully clear. Additionally, the complication of NSAID use lead to some serious physical problem bleeding. Therefore, the exclusive criteria for limiting the NSAID use is including allergy, gastrointestinal haemorrhage ,presence of coagulopathy or received anticoagulation therapy. Previous study showed that another natural compound, resveratrol, owns similar biological effect with NSAID. Firstly, it could inhibit the inflammatory response on in vivo model through inhibition of COX and IL-6 etc. Secondly, it could not influence the level of platelet and coagulation, which means safer than NSAID. Thirdly, numerous studies showed that resveratrol could effectively the progression of severe acute pancreatitis. According to data, we design the project. The purpose of this study is to determine whether oral resveratrol pre-ERCP is effective on control of Post-ERCP pancreatitis.
- This prospective, randomised controlled trial was done in 8 tertiary referral hospitals
in China. Patients (aged 18-90 years) with native papilla planned for diagnostic or
therapeutic ERCP were eligible for enrolment in the study. Exclusion criteria included
contraindications to ERCP, known pancreatic head mass, previous biliary sphincterotomy
without planned contrast injection into the pancreatic duct, acute pancreatitis within
3 days, ERCP for biliary stent removal or exchange without anticipated pancreatogram,
known active cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease, unwilling or inability to
provide consent, and pregnant or breastfeeding women. Indications or contra-
indications for ERCP were determined by endoscopists or anaesthesiologists before ERCP;
these included risks to patient health or life judged to outweigh the potential benefit
of ERCP, known or suspected perforated viscus, and haemodynamic instability. The risk
stratification of the patients was defined based on criteria used in the study by
Elmunzer and colleages. Patients were considered high risk for post-ERCP pancreatitis
if they met at least one of the major criteria or two or more of the minor criteria.
The risk status of the patients was determined immediately after the procedure by one
investigator at each site who was masked to group allocation.
- Randomisation and masking
- The study coordinator did the block randomisation (ten in each block). The
randomisation list was computer generated, and stratified according to individual
centres. Patients were assigned randomly in a 1:1 ratio, before receiving ERCP, to
either the universal pre- procedural group or the risk-stratified post-procedural
group. Oral resveratrol or Indometacin was administered in the procedure room before or
after ERCP by one investigator in each site who did not participate in data collection
and analysis. Endoscopists and assistances who participated in ERCP procedures were
masked to group allocation. Investigators who collected demographic or
procedure-related data or participated in the assessment of post-ERCP compli- cations
were also masked to group allocation. Patients were not masked to treatment allocation.
- Before the start of this study, post-procedural selective indometacin in high-risk
patients had been demonstrated as effective in the prevention of post-ERCP
pancreatitis.
- Outcomes The primary outcome of the study was the frequency of post-ERCP pancreatitis.
The diagnosis of post-ERCP pancreatitis was established if there was new onset of upper
abdominal pain associated with an elevated serum amylase of at least three times the
upper limit of normal range at 24 h after the procedure, and admission to hospital for
at least 2 nights. The secondary outcome was the frequency of moderate to severe
post-ERCP pancreatitis. We defined severity of pancreatitis according to the criteria
reported by Cotton and colleagues.
Other post-ERCP complications (including bleeding, biliary infection, perforation, and any
adverse outcomes requiring hospital admission or prolonged hospital stay for further
management) were monitored as described previously.24 Moderate to severe bleeding was
defined as clinically significant bleeding with decrease in haemoglobin concentration of at
least 3 g/L with the need for transfusion, angiographic intervention, or surgery. 23
Patients were contacted at 30 days to assess late complications (including delayed bleeding
or cardiovascular or renal adverse events); this was the final follow-up.
An investigator who was familiar with ERCP at each site and masked to treatment allocation
recorded the procedure-related parameters including cannulation methods, numbers of
cannulation attempts, and inadvertent pancreatic duct cannulation, pancrea- tography, and
prophylactic placement of pancreatic duct stent. The same investigator also recorded the
patient demographics, post-ERCP adverse events potentially caused by the procedure or study
drug, and follow-up data. All data were subsequently entered into a web- based database and
managed by independent investigators.
We defined severity of post-ERCP complications according to the Cotton criteria:23 mild
(pancreatitis after the procedure requiring admission or prolongation of planned admission
to 2-3 days); moderate (pancreatitis after the procedure requiring hospitalisation of 4-10
days); and severe (pancreatitis after the procedure requiring hospitalisation for more than
10 days, or haemorrhagic pancreatitis, phlegmon or pseudocyst, or intervention). Detailed
definitions for other adverse events are provided in the appendix.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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