Hernia Clinical Trial
Official title:
CSP #456 - Tension Free Inguinal Hernia Repair: Comparison of Open and Laparoscopic Surgical Techniques
Inguinal hernia is one of the most common worldwide afflictions of men. The presence of an inguinal hernia is indication for its repair. Approximately 700,000 hernia repairs are performed in the U.S. each year, and this procedure accounts for 10% of all general surgery procedures in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) (10,000 inguinal herniorrhaphies performed per year). There are many different techniques currently in use for repairing inguinal hernias and with the advent of laparoscopy, yet another technique is being advocated. Laparoscopic repair has been reported in some studies to be superior to open repair because of less pain and earlier return to work. However, laparoscopic repair requires a general or regional anesthetic and expensive equipment and supplies to perform. There is also evidence that open tension-free mesh repair may have results similar to laparoscopic repair for these patient centered outcome measures. The general acceptance of this procedure, especially in the VHA, has not been uniform. Furthermore, no randomized trial of sufficient size and power to be conclusive has been done to set forth the operative "gold standard" for hernia repair.
Primary Hypothesis: Open tension-free herniorrhaphy when compared with laparoscopic
herniorrhaphy will achieve equal or better recurrence rates and lower costs while achieving
equivalent outcomes for patient-centered measures.
Secondary Hypotheses:
Intervention: Patients randomized to open repair will undergo a standardized tension-free
herniorrhaphy with prosthesis (method of Lichtenstein). Patients randomized to laparoscopic
herniorrhaphy will undergo a standardized preperitoneal repair with prosthesis, using either
a transperitoneal or extraperitoneal approach. During the implementation period of the
trial, a preliminary laboratory session will be conducted with all site PIs to standardize
herniorrhaphy techniques, reach consensus on all aspects of perioperative patient management
(including postoperative patient instructions, follow-up schedules, definitions of
recurrence and complications), and to ensure that the site PI is thoroughly familiar with
the protocol.
Each site will be visited by one of two expert surgeons (the Study Chair or a Co-PI surgeon)
to observe the operative procedures and ensure that participating surgeons adhere to the
protocol in all respects. The first visit will take place in the first 6 months of the study
and then as needed thereafter, based on routine examination of operative records randomly
selected from each site (5 open and 5 laparoscopic herniorrhaphies, and, if appropriate,
viewing of videotapes of the laparoscopic procedures).
Primary Outcomes: Hernia recurrence rate.
Study Abstract:
Background: Inguinal hernia is one of the most common worldwide afflictions of men. The
presence of an inguinal hernia is indication for its repair. Approximately 700,000 hernia
repairs are performed in the U.S. each year, and this procedure accounts for 10% of all
general surgery procedures in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) (10,000 inguinal
herniorrhaphies performed per year). There are many different techniques currently in use
for repairing inguinal hernias and with the advent of laparoscopy, yet another technique is
being advocated. Laparoscopic repair has been reported in some studies to be superior to
open repair because of less pain and earlier return to work. However, laparoscopic repair
requires a general or regional anesthetic and expensive equipment and supplies to perform.
There is also evidence that open tension-free mesh repair may have results similar to
laparoscopic repair for these patient centered outcome measures. The general acceptance of
this procedure, especially in the VHA, has not been uniform. Furthermore, no randomized
trial of sufficient size and power to be conclusive has been done to set forth the operative
gold standard for hernia repair.
Objectives: To determine whether open tension-free herniorrhaphy when compared with
laparoscopic herniorrhaphy can achieve equal or better recurrence rates and lower costs
while achieving equivalent outcomes for patient-centered measures.
Methods: This multi-center VA cooperative study is enrolling 2200 men with inguinal hernia
and randomizing them to one of two operative techniques: open tension-free (Lichtenstein)
repair, or laparoscopic preperitoneal repair. The primary outcome measure is recurrence at
two years. Secondary outcome measures are complications, pain, time to return to normal
activities, health-related quality of life, patient satisfaction, caregiver burden, and
cost. The role of comorbidity in the outcome will also be determined. The sample size will
permit at least 80% power to detect a difference of 3% in 2-year recurrence rates between
the two surgical procedures. Fourteen VAMCs are randomizing the 2200 patients over a 3-year
accrual period. The study will also have a 2-year follow-up period. All patients will be
followed to the end of the study so that follow-up will range from 2-5 years (average 3.5
years).
On November 29, 2001, the Hines Cooperative Studies Human Rights Committee and the Data and
Safety Monitoring Board met to review the data from CSP #456. Both committees determined
that there were sufficient data to complete the trial without enrolling any additional
patients and recommended that enrollment be stopped. There were no safety concerns.
Approximately 2,165 patients of a targeted 2,200 had been enrolled at this point. All sites
were notified of this within 24 hours of the action.
Main Manuscript:
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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