Kidney Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Laparoscopic Entry Technique in Renal Surgery: a Randomised Controlled Trial Comparing Open (Hasson) Versus Closed (Veress) Techniques.
This is a randomised controlled trial to evaluate safety and efficacy of two different port site entry techniques in laparoscopic renal surgery: open method (Hasson) and closed method (Veress). It will involve 300 adult patients undergoing elective laparoscopic renal surgery in Tallaght hospital under two Consultant urologists.
Surgical specialties commonly using laparoscopic techniques like gynecology and general
surgery have extensively compared the various available techniques of port insertion (1).
There is very little known regarding the safest entry technique for the initial port in
laparoscopic renal surgery. Results from other surgical specialties cannot simply be
extrapolated to this type of laparoscopic surgery due to difference in entry site and patient
position with renal surgery. Hence, this randomised controlled trial will be performed in a
urological unit with two laparoscopic renal surgeons to compare two commonly used techniques
of initial trocar insertion: the closed method and the open method.
Background Since its introduction in 1991 by Clayman, laparoscopic renal surgery has become
very popular and is widely used for both benign and malignant renal operations such as
radical, simple and partial nephrectomies, pyeloplasties, nephro-ureterectomies (2). The
overall reported major and minor complication rate of laparoscopic renal surgery is 9.5% and
1.9% respectively (2). Initial entry by trocar insertion is the most hazardous part of the
laparoscopic procedure. Opinion regarding the safest entry technique is divided. The two most
commonly used techniques of port entry include open and closed (3). An open technique, as
first described by Hasson, involves the peritoneum being cut down, followed by the insertion
of a blunt trocar under direct visualisation, gas insufflation, and insertion of the
laparoscope. One of the closed technique involves the insertion of a Veress needle (a needle
equipped with a spring-loaded obturator) into the peritoneal cavity, followed by gas
insufflation (act of blowing) and insertion of a trocar (a sharp, pointed instrument with a
cannula used to enter the body cavity). Finally the laparoscope is passed through the trocar
once the obturator is removed. Previous meta-analyses in laparoscopic surgery from
gynaecological and general surgical operations have not been able to support one technique
over the other due to insufficient evidence.to our knowledge (3), there are no randomised
controlled trials comparing these two techniques in laparoscopic renal surgery. During
laparoscopic renal surgery, the patient is placed in a lateral flank position with the table
flexed. The initial port of entry can be either at the umbilicus or lateral to it. This
position is unique to urological surgery and hence can have different implications to the
initial trocar insertion technique.
The objective is to compare the open method (Hasson) and closed method (Veress) of
laparoscopic port site entry in renal surgery
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