Endometrial Carcinoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Study of Instillation Technique Using The Modified Intra- Uterine Manipulator Catheter With Methylene Blue, Isosulfan Blue or Indocyanine Green Dyes, Compared to Cervical Injection, For Sentinel Lymph Node Detection in Endometrial Carcinoma
The purpose of this study is to compare the Instillation Technique Using The Modified Intra- Uterine Manipulator Catheter With Methylene Blue, Isosulfan Blue or Indocyanine Green Dyes, Compared to Cervical Injection, For Sentinel Lymph Node Detection in Endometrial Carcinoma.
Following consent, surgery will be determined by the physician thereby determining group
assignment- i.e the laparoscopic surgery group oror the robotic assisted surgery group. Both
groups will undergo SLN mapping by instillation and injection. The Laparotomy/Laparoscopy
Group will have Lymphazurin by injection and instillation of methylene blue dye. The Robot
Assisted Group will have ICG by injection and instillation of methylene blue. Patients will
undergo total hysterectomy, bilateral salpingoophorectomy, pelvic and paraaortic
lymphadenectomy through laparotomy, laparoscopic or robotic assisted surgery as clinically
determined by their attending physician. Subjects will undergo this surgery whether or not
enrolled in the study.
Any clinically indicated uterine manipulator will be acceptable. Potential subjects will be
informed of the potential risks of this device so they may make an informed decision about
participation in the study. However the manipulator is standard of care and is not a study
related risk. Subjects who agree to this study procedure will be monitored for adverse
events.
The dyes used in this study are commercially available and will be provided through internal
funding from the CTCA Gynecology/Oncology Department. Potential subjects will be informed
of the potential risks of these drugs so they may make an informed decision about
participation in the study. Subjects who agree to this study procedure will be monitored for
adverse events.
After administration of anesthesia, the intra-uterine uterine manipulator catheter will be
inserted using the following suggested instructions for use;
• After the standard of care vaginal prep with povidone-iodine or any other surgeon
preference cleansing solution, expose the cervix using a vaginal speculum. No additional
preparation of the cervix is needed.
Immediately following exposure pf the cervix with the speculum, and before introduction of
the intra-uterine uterine manipulator with catheter, 4ml total of isosulfan 1% blue or ICG
(depending on what route of surgery is being elected) dye will be delivered by cervical
injection as follows:
- Using a 20 or 22 gauge spinal needle, inject dye into the cervix at the 12, 3, 6 and 9
o'clock positions.
- Each site will receive approximately 1ml of dye with ½ superficial just under the
mucosa and the remainder approximately 1cm deep to the prior injection.
The 22 gauge needles are commercially available and will be provided as routine clinical
care. Potential subjects will be informed of the potential risks of injection so they may
make an informed decision about participation in the study. Subjects who agree to this study
procedure will be monitored for adverse events.
• Introduce the uterine manipulator with catheter trans-cervically until the distal balloon
is positioned in the lower portion of the uterus. This is no different from routine clinical
care.
Immediately following cervical injection and placement of the uterine manipulator and once
intra-abdominal, the first step in surgery will be to occlude both fallopian tubes, as
typically done as part of this surgery, using electrocautery devices (e.g. Ligasure) for
sealing only the tubes.
Immediately following occlusion of both fallopian tubes, the comparator instillation dye
will be instilled into the uterine cavity through the pre-inserted intra-uterine uterine
manipulator catheter as follows:
- Insert the clinically selected uterine manipulator as per standard clinical practice.
- Slowly inject the dye through the center uterine cavity catheter access port., Rapid
injection of dye could cause high intrauterine pressure resulting in extravasation. Use
slow constant pressure to instill the dye. This can be done by the surgical assistant
or by the operating surgeon via a long extension tubing.
It is estimated that it may take up to 40 minutes for the dyes to be absorbed by the
surrounding tissue and taken up by the lymphatic vessels turning the nodes blue or green.
During this time
the surgery will proceed without delay. These study procedures will not increase the
estimated total time to perform the surgery.
The surgery will proceed as routine for any sentinel node dissection. Briefly, during
regular dissection, visual identification of any dye taken up by any nodes and specific
anatomical distributions will be documented using an anatomical documentation sheet.
Visual detection of the methylene and isosulfan blue dye will be done with the
investigator's naked eye.
Visual detection of ICG dye will include use of a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera called
Spycam equipped with 3 main components (a near-infrared sensitive image intensifier, 16-bit
dynamic-range frame transfer CCD camera and light-emitting diodes [LEDs] that is mounted to
the robotic surgical instruments. The Spycam will be directed onto the operative field
illuminating the fluorescing dye green. The camera is connected to a monitor and images will
display on the screen and will be analyzed using digital imaging processing.
Using the clock in the surgery room as a reference, a member of the surgical team will
record the exact time elapsed (in minutes) from administration until visual detection of dye
is made for each technique. Blue/green nodes will be labeled as sentinel nodes and
non-blue/green nodes will be labeled as non-sentinel. Blue/green nodes will also be labeled
to describe which dye is being detected (methylene, isosulfan or ICG). Differences in the
dye deposition/absorption by each method (injection vs. instillation) will be documented as
either detected or not detected in the nodes and channels using color photography in the
surgical setting. Continuous monitoring will be done for adverse events during the surgery
and post operatively up to time of patient discharge from the hospital.
All node samples will be histopathologically examined with Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) and
Immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining to detect micro-metastasis. Analysis will compare
results of the instillation technique to cervical injection technique in the same subject
for sensitivity of SLN mapping, estimating the false negative predictive value, time to
detect SLNs, anatomical distributions of the SLNs, and differences in dye absorption using
each technique.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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