Non-specific Abdominal Pain Clinical Trial
— FLOOfficial title:
First Laparoscopy or Active Observation in Acute Non-specific Abdominal Pain: The FLO Trial
Verified date | March 2013 |
Source | Mid Western Regional Hospital, Ireland |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Ireland: Research Ethics Committee |
Study type | Interventional |
Patients with acute abdominal pain comprise a significant proportion of attendances at
emergency departments. These patients account for about a third of general surgical
admissions in a typical day. In some cases, the diagnosis is clear from baseline
investigations (for example in cases of pancreatitis). In other cases, the diagnosis remains
unclear but there are signs that necessitate urgent surgery (for example in cases of
appendicitis). A final group exists where no clear explanation for the pain is found and
where there are insufficient clinical signs to warrant surgery. These patients are said to
have "non specific abdominal pain" (NSAP) and present a management dilemma.
Traditionally such patients are managed with a strategy of active observation. Patients are
examined at regular intervals and may undergo imaging. In some cases, symptoms and signs
progress and surgery is needed while in other cases resolution may occur or a diagnosis may
be reached non-operatively allowing focused medical treatment. Recently, two alternative
strategies have emerged. Early cross-sectional imaging using CT scanning may identify
conditions whilst being non-invasive. This would allow diagnosis and treatment would follow.
The alternative strategy of early laparoscopy (key hole surgery) offers the possibility of
concomitant therapy, but is invasive.
The study hypothesis is that in patients with acute non-specific abdominal pain active
management with laparoscopy on admission will reduce hospital stay and costs when compared
to traditional active observation, without increasing complications.
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 17 |
Est. completion date | January 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - age greater than 18 - admission with abdominal pain for up to one week prior to admission deemed to be non-specific pain by senior surgical team member - patient willing to give full informed consent for participation Exclusion Criteria: - patients less than 18 years of age - pain of greater than 7 days duration - admission with abdominal pain in previous 6 months - history of inflammatory bowel disease - previous history of appendicectomy - previous surgery rendering laparoscopy unsafe eg. multiple laparotomies - history of intra-abdominal transplant including retroperitoneal renal allografting - clinical picture necessitating immediate surgical procedure - cases involving trauma - patients who are unable or unwilling to give full informed consent |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Ireland | University Hospital Limerick | Limerick |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Mid Western Regional Hospital, Ireland |
Ireland,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Length of hospital stay | The primary outcome is the length of inpatient hospital stay which will an expected average of 3 days. | the length of inpatient stay | Yes |
Secondary | Complications within 30 days | Includes any complication encountered by participants in either arm of the trial in the first 30 days following randomisation. | within 30 days following randomisation | Yes |
Secondary | further radiological investigations during inpatient stay | A secondary outcome measure is the number of radiological tests patients undergo during their inpatient stay following randomisation. These could be ultrasound, plain radiography, CT scanning, MRI scanning. Average inpatient stay is expected to be 3days. | during inpatient stay | Yes |
Secondary | readmission to hospital with abdominal pain | from randomisation to 6 months | Yes | |
Secondary | SF36 score at 4 weeks | The Short Form (36) Health Survey is a validated survey of patient health | from randomisation to4 weeks | No |
Secondary | SF36 score at 6 months | The Short Form (36) Health Survey is a validated survey of patient health | 6 months following randomisation | No |
Secondary | upstaging to more severe diagnosis within 6 months | from randomisation to 6 months | No | |
Secondary | further blood investigations during inpatient stay | This refers to the number of further investigations during hospital stay. Average length of stay is expected to be 3 days | during inpatient stay | Yes |
Secondary | further urine tests during inpatient stay | This refers to further urine tests during hospital stay. The average hospital stay is expected to be 3 days. | during inpatient stay | Yes |