Lymphocele Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of a Fibrin Sealant (Tissucol Duo®) for the Prevention of Lymphocele After Laparoscopic Pelvic Lymphadenectomy Due to Gynaecological Cancer: a Randomised Controlled Trial
Objective:
Lymphocele (LC) is a potential complication of lymph node removal. The objective of this
study was to assess the efficacy of the Tissucol Duo® (Baxter AG Industriestrasse 67 A-1221
Vienna, Austria) fibrin sealant in decreasing the incidence of LC after pelvic laparoscopic
lymph node dissection using harmonic shears.
Material and Methods:
This prospective double blind randomised study was conducted between February 2012 and June
2016 in Donostia University Hospital (Spain). Overall, 74 patients diagnosed with
gynaecological cancer gave written informed consent and were included in the study. After
bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy, the fibrin sealant was used following manufacturer's
instructions in one hemipelvis but not the other. Overall, the product was applied in 41
(55.4%) left and 33 (44.6%) right hemipelvises. The primary objective of the study was to
determine the incidence of LC after surgery in symptomatic and asymptomatic patients. Imaging
(ultrasound, computed tomography and magnetic resonance) was performed to detect LC at 3, 6
and 12 months after surgery.
This prospective double blind randomized study was conducted by the Gynaecological Cancer
Unit of Donostia University Hospital (San Sebastian, Basque Country, Spain) between February
2012 and June 2016. The study was approved on 24 August 2012 by the clinical research ethics
committee of our hospital (study reference number ONC-1111).
All patients diagnosed with gynaecological (cervical, endometrial or ovarian) cancer due to
undergo transperitoneal bilateral laparoscopic pelvic lymphadenectomy (LPL) as part of their
surgical treatment were invited to participate. Our treatment protocol is based on clinical
guidelines of the European Society Gynaecology and Oncology and the Spanish Society of
Gynaecology and Obstetrics (SEGO).
The inclusion criteria were that the patient had endometrial, cervical, or ovarian cancer,
underwent PL, an expected survival of more than 12 weeks and appropriate bone marrow, kidney
and liver function, as well as that they agreed to participate and signed the informed
consent form. Patients were excluded if they had previously received radiotherapy or
chemotherapy, haematological disorders including coagulation defects, a history of
thromboembolic disease or lymphatic system disorders (lymphedema or lymphocele), or allergy
to aprotinin, as well as if they declined to participate or did not sign the informed consent
form.
After standard preoperative assessment, patients were randomly assigned to having Tissucol
Duo® applied to the surgical bed in only the right or only the left hemipelvis after
bilateral LPL. The patient, doctors who performed the follow-up and initially the surgeon
were blinded to the randomization sequence and site of application. That is, the surgeon was
only told to which hemipelvis the sealant was to be applied when he considered that the
surgical procedure had been completed. Following the manufacturer´s instructions, 5 ml of
sealant was sprayed evenly across the entire surgical bed in only one hemipelvis (the treated
hemipelvis). Using this protocol, the investigators sought to minimise intervention bias, in
that the surgeon did not know where he was going to spray the sealant until the end of the
LPL procedure. The investigators decided to treat only one hemipelvis in each patient,
thereby allowing patients to serve as their own controls, in order to compare outcomes with
and without the sealant in the same body with the same clinical characteristics and reduce
the influence of other factors beyond the treatment.
All the patients received antithrombotic and antibiotic prophylaxis according to our usual
protocols and were operated on by the same surgical team, all procedures being carried out
using ultrasonic shears (Harmonic®, Ethicon, Cincinnati, OH, USA) In patients with
endometrial cancer, we also carried out retroperitoneal aortocaval lymphadenectomy as part of
surgical staging (para-aortic lymph node dissection PALND, as described by Querleu) up to the
left renal vein, followed by type A radical hysterectomy (Querleu-Morrow 2011/EORT) and
opening of the retroperitoneal space after the surgical intervention. In patients with
cervical cancer, after LPL and intraoperative lymph node biopsy, the surgeons completed
surgery with transperitoneal aortic lymphadenectomy if the biopsy was positive or radical
hysterectomy (type B1 or C1) if it was negative.
The limits of the dissection of the LPL were: the psoas muscle laterally, the obliterated
umbilical artery medially, the crossing of the ureter over the common iliac artery cranially,
and the crossing of the circumflex iliac vein over the external iliac artery caudally. The
caudal limit of the aortocaval dissection was the bifurcation of the aorta, with the cranial
limit being the level of both renal veins, and all lymphatic tissue was removed from the
paracaval, interaortocaval, paraaortic and presacral regions between the ureters.
Data were collected on the following variables: age, body weight, height, type of tumour,
tumour stage (FIGO), surgical procedure, duration of surgery, intra and postoperative
complications, length of hospital stay, readmission, and number of lymph nodes obtained in
each area, as well as the presence, location, size and symptoms of LCs and changes over time
in these parameters.
Routine follow-up assessments conducted at 3, 6 and 12 months after surgery included imaging,
ultrasound, computed tomography or magnetic resonance, depending on which was indicated for
monitoring the patient's cancer. The imaging findings were used to assess the incidence of
LC, defined as the accumulation of lymphatic fluid, in particular along the iliac vessels,
the observer for this examination being blind to patient group allocation. These follow-up
findings were compared to imaging (ultrasound, computed tomography or magnetic resonance)
results prior to the surgery.
The sample size was calculated assuming an overall incidence of LC after LPL of 30%, based on
previous studies. The investigators estimated that a sample of at least 39 hemipelvises for
each study arm was needed to declare a 34% (Tinelli et al) lower incidence of LC with the
treatment as significant with an alpha of 0.05 and beta of 0.1.
All the patient clinical and surgical data were entered into a Microsoft Access 2010
database. Once cleaned, data were imported into IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, version 21.0
(Armonk, NY, USA) for statistical analysis. Data were summarised using the mean and standard
deviation for quantitative variables and absolute and relative frequencies expressed as
percentages for qualitative variables.
The analysis was performed per protocol. To assess the efficacy of the intervention,
chi-square or Fisher's exact tests were used to compare the rate of LC in the two groups
(intervention and control), while Student's t test for unpaired samples was used to compare
parametric variables between groups. Significance was set at a value of p <0.05.
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