Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase III, Randomized, Unblinded, Controlled Clinical Trial for Evaluating the Effectiveness of the Use of the New Hemostatic Patch Hemopatch ® in Patients Undergoing Surgical Liver Resection
This prospective randomized study aims to determine the influence of the use of local hemostatic on the incidence of local complications derived from the edge of transection: biliary fistula or bleeding, after scheduled hepatic resection.
Achieving adequate hemostasis is a fundamental prerequisite to successfully perform any
surgical procedure, but particularly in cases of visceral abdominal surgery, where a slight
bleeding, apparently insignificant, can end in significant bleeding (Haas et al Clinic and
Applied thombosis 2006).
Control of intraoperative bleeding is initially performed using traditional techniques such
as compression, ligatures, clips, Electrocautery, or clamps. The traditional surgical
techniques often fail to prevent bleeding, despite performing a careful and meticulous
hemostasis.
The morbidity after elective liver surgery has been reduced in hepatobiliary surgery centers
mainly after standardizing anatomical liver resections. These techniques decrease necrosis,
bleeding, and the incidence of biliary fistulas (Kraus et al J Am Coll Surg 2005).
Bleeding and biliary fistula are the main determinants of postoperative liver morbidity, with
an incidence around 4.2-10% and 4-17% respectively (Yamashita et al Ann Surg 2001; Jin et al
World J Gastroenterology 2013).
This complication is difficult to handle especially in patients with cirrhosis or liver
cancer, because of reduced platelet and blood coagulation activity (Figueras et al Ann Surg
2007).
Moreover, it is particularly difficult to determine the individual risk of rebleeding or
biliary fistula during the intraoperative time.
Many adjuvant surgical hemostatic procedures have been tested in the liver: such as oxidized
cellulose, absorbable sponges, fibrillar collagen, and fibrin sealants.
There is an extensive published literature reporting the use of adhesives, Sealants, and
topical hemostatics in surgery. There is little doubt that the hemostatic effects of these
devices produce a beneficial impact on blood loss. However, there is a wide variation in the
literature results. Most of the initial clinical data were obtained in cardiovascular
surgery. The only trial that has provided the most significant data in hemostatic efficacy
was published by Rousou et al in J Thorac Cardiol South 1999. In this randomized multicenter
study, 333 patients that underwent emergency cardiac reoperations were randomized to receive
either conventional treatment with fibrinogen or other hemostatic. The 92% of the patients
assigned to receive fibrin sealant had a complete hemostasis at 5 minutes, compared with the
12% of those treated with other topical hemostatic.
In clinical practice is difficult to quantify the efficacy of the topical hemostatics on
hemostasis. The overall effect of perioperative blood loss can only be inferred indirectly by
volume drainage and the number of transfused concentrates (Kraus et al J Am Coll Surg 2005).
The volume of blood loss during liver surgery depends on many factors: systemic coagulation,
underlying disease, surgery complexity, surgeon experience, central venous pressure, and
local hemodynamics.
Moreover, bile leakages are much harder to identify, define, and particularly to quantify,
when compared to bleeding. The biliary system is a low pressure system (less than venous
pressure). Animal studies have shown that the use of collagen adhesives is effective for
preventing biliary fistulas (Wise et al Am Surg 2002).
In a cohort study of 32 adult patients, in which a right hepatic lobe Split was held, it was
compared the use of Tachosil ® versus fibrin glue. The transection area was treated with
fibrin glue in 16 patients and with Tachosil ® in the other 16 ones. No differences were
observed regarding the need of postoperative transfusion. Nevertheless, the group of patients
treated with the fibrin patch showed a significantly lower incidence of bile leakage. Those
findings were justified based on the assumption that the use of a fibrin patch, according to
its base rich in fibrin, prevents bile leakage, occluding the biliary radicals at the
transection (Toti et al Dig Liver Dis. 2010).
The first clinical trial comparing a hemostatic patch (Tachosil ®) versus the standard
surgical hemostasis with Argon was published by Frilling et al in 2005 (Frilling et al
Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2005). It was observed a reduction in the intraoperative time for
hemostasis and less posterior drain in the Tachosil ® group (N = 121).
In 2007, Figueras et al (Figueras et al Ann Surg 2007) published the results of a randomized
clinical trial comparing the fibrin glue administration (Tissucol ® + collagen sponge) versus
control in 300 patients. The results showed no differences between groups in blood loss,
transfusions, and incidence of biliary fistula, and therefore it was concluded that the
cessation of the use of fibrin sealant would be a justified saving cost.
In the clinical trial recently published by Moench et al (Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2014) they
studied the intraoperative time of hemostasis evaluated at 3 minutes by a non-inferiority
design. The collagen hemostatic agent Sangustop ® proved to be as effective as the fibrinogen
and thrombin sponge Tachosil ® in times of intraoperative hemostasis (n = 128).
The different results observed among studies may be due to the diversity of the agents
evaluated, the poor standardization of the application techniques, and especially by the
clinical differences.
Hemopatch® is indicated as a hemostatic device in procedures when the surgical control of
bleeding by pressure, ligation, or conventional methods is inefficient or impractical. It
consists in a soft, thin, foldable, and flexible collagen patch derived from bovine skin, and
NHS-PEG coated (pentaerythritol polyethylene glycol ether tetrasuccinimidil glutarate). The
white face, which is applied on the tissue, is covered with a thin layer of NHS-PEG providing
a firm adherence to it, thus sealing the bleeding surface and inducing hemostasis at the same
time. Because of its flexible structure, the application of Hemopatch ® on the site to
achieve hemostasis is easily controlled. The uncoated side is marked with blue squares of a
biocompatible dye, to differentiate it from the coated side.
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