Rectal Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multicentric Randomised Trial to Evaluate Efficacy, Morbidity and Functional Outcome of Endoscopic TranAnal Proctectomy Versus Standard Transabdominal Laparoscopic Proctectomy for Low Lying Rectal Cancer (ETAP-GRECCAR 11)
Standard surgical treatment of mid and low rectal cancer is total mesorectal excision (TME).
Originally performed by open surgery, TME demonstrated improved local control and reduced
urogenital morbidity. Laparoscopic approach has been validated by several randomised
controlled trials: laparoscopic approach offers to the patient a better post-operative
recovery, a lower risk of wound hernia and comparable oncological results. However, the risk
of conversion to open procedure remains significant.
Endoscopic Transanal Proctectomy allows retrograd mesorectal excision, performing the whole
pelvic dissection via a specific-moderate cost device. The procedure is then completed by a
briefer transabdominal laparoscopic step to mobilise the colon and perform inferior
mesenteric vessels ligation, prior to low coloanal anastomosis. The originality of this
approach is to perform a surgical dissection via an extra peritoneal route, without
peritoneal and abdominal wound trauma. This focuses on new technical improvement in the area
of mini-invasive pelviabdominal surgery using natural orifice as surgical access. This
approach offer closer and better exposure of pelvic dissection plane and could improve
oncological quality and pelvic nerve preservation. It could be profitable to postoperative
patient outcome. However rates and type of cancer-recurrences as well as functional results
have to be assessed in a controlled study. This technique has shown to be feasible and
reproducible through early clinical series. Conversion rates appear to be lower than
published rates of laparoscopic approach, markedly inferior to 10%. Compiled rates of
morbidity (27.8%), R1 resection* (6%), mesorectum macroscopic integrity (100%) appear to be
comparable to laparoscopic approach results. However functional results as well as urologic
morbidity have to be evaluated in comparative studies. In a preliminary retrospective
comparative (n=72) we founded comparable oncological quality criteria (R1 resection 5.9% vs
10.5% p 0.74, Grade 3 mesorectal integrity 57.5 vs 56.2 p 0.99), lower conversion rate to
open procedure (2.9% vs 23.6% p 0.011), shorter in-hospital stay (8 vs 9 days p 0.038).
Comparable morbidity rates (Dindo 1-4 27% vs 34% p 0.52) and functional results (Kirwan 1/2
80.3% vs 80.6% p 0.94) were also founded. These data need to be confirmed. To this date,
Endoscopic Transanal Proctectomy has been evaluated through preliminary studies including
several short series demonstrating the feasibility of the technique and showing low
morbidity. For some authors the benefit of transanal approach is significant in difficult
cases such as male patient and narrow pelvis. Very recently, two non randomised comparative
studies were published with conclusions close to those in our study.
Investigators propose, with the support of the GRECCAR group, to conduct a national,
multicenter, open-label randomized study based on oncological non-inferiority (R1 resection
rate) for the main objective, comparing Endoscopic Transanal Proctectomy to Standard
Transabdominal Laparoscopic Proctectomy, for low lying rectal cancer requiring manual
colo-anal anastomosis. There is a clear expected benefit expected for the patients through
the ETAP procedure in term of post operative short term outcome, risk of conversion to open
procedure, risk of wound hernia.This trial could also show significant advantages in terms of
quality of dissection, quality of the specimen, quality of nerve preservation.
The main objective of study is to assess if R1 resection rate of Endoscopic Transanal Proctectomy (ETAP) is not meaningfully inferior to Standard Laparoscopic TME for low lying rectal cancer requiring manual colo-anal anastomosis. The secondary objective will evaluate conversion rate, mini invasive level of abdominal approach postoperative morbidity, In hospital length of stay, Mesorectum macroscopic assessment, Functional urologic and sexual results, Fecal Continency, global QoL, stoma-free survival, disease-free survival at 3 years. Patients with non metastatic rectal adenocarcinoma requiring coloanal anastomosis will be considered for the study. Based on the non-inferiority hypothesis, the population estimated in this study at 226 patients, 113 for each arm. Inclusion period will be 3 years, the study will be running for 6 years. ;
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