Angiodysplasia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment of Ex-vivo Small Bowel Mucosa With a Dedicated Radiofrequency Ablation (SB-RFA) Catheter.
Gastrointestinal angiodysplasia (GIAD, a.k.a. angioectasia, arteriovenous malformations or
AVM, and vascular ectasia) are mucosal or submucosal dilated blood vessels, usually
multifocal, and a frequent cause of obscure GI bleeding, especially mid-small bowel
hemorrhage.
Endoscopic treatment using argon plasma coagulation (APC) is popular but presents limitations
as application of the therapy is not uniform, and passing the catheter repetitively through
the enteroscope may not be possible. Despite endoscopic treatment rebleeding rates are high,
between 25 to 50%.
An improvement in our ability to treat GIAD endoscopically is desirable. An ablation catheter
would need to be easy to use repetitively through the enteroscope, be more maneuverable to
direct treatment to the lesions, and also cover more area of intestinal mucosa per treatment
compared to APC, and it should be low risk for damage to the healthy intestinal mucosa.
Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) may hold the answer. It's efficacy for treatment of superficial
Barrett esophagus is undisputed, and it has recently been used with success to treat gastric
antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) a condition which is remarkably similar to GIAD.
Gastrointestinal angiodysplasia (GIAD, a.k.a. angioectasia, arteriovenous malformations or
AVM, and vascular ectasia) are mucosal or submucosal dilated blood vessels lined by
epithelium with no overlying mucosal lesion formed due to a combination of sub-mucosal vein
obstruction, hypoxemia and neovascularization. It is a frequent cause of obscure GI bleeding,
and the most common finding when evaluating mid-small bowel hemorrhage. It is also more
common in patients with underlying valvular heart disease (especially aortic stenosis),
end-stage renal disease, and von Willebrand disease (acquired or congenital). These lesions
are usually multifocal as forty to 60% of the patients will have more than one About half
stop bleeding spontaneously but at least a quarter of patients will suffer recurrent GI
bleeding manifested by overt bleeding (melena or hematochezia), persistent fecal occult blood
or persistent iron deficiency anemia.
Management includes endoscopic therapy, surgery, therapeutic angiography, and pharmacological
treatment. Endoscopic therapy including thermal methods (multi-polar electrocoagulation,
argon plasma coagulation, laser), injections (sclerosants, saline, epinephrine), and
mechanical methods (hemostatic clips, band ligators) are widely used to treat all causes of
GI bleeding including GIAD. Argon plasma coagulation (APC) is the preferred mode of
endoscopic therapy for GIAD due to availability, relative ease of use, and a perceived
superficial rather than deep depth of burn; however, studies have shown that depth of tissue
injury can be substantial. APC therapy may not be uniform as adequacy and depth of ablation
depends on the presence of debris, mucous or blood between the APC probe and tissue, and the
ability to target the tissue in the presence of breathing, intestinal peristalsis, and scope
position. The APC catheter can also bend during repeated insertions, a necessary maneuver to
remove the burned tissue debris on the tip of the catheter which otherwise affects the argon
plasma beam and this may terminally damage it.
Angioectasia rebleeding rates are high, at least 25 to over 50%. An improvement in our
ability to treat small bowel GIAD is desirable. An ablation catheter would need to be easy to
use repetitively through the enteroscope, be more maneuverable to direct treatment to the
lesions, and also cover more area of intestinal mucosa per treatment compared to APC, and it
should be low risk for damage to the healthy intestinal mucosa while treating GIAD.
Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) may hold the answer. It's efficacy for treatment of superficial
Barrett esophagus is undisputed, and it has recently been used with success to treat gastric
antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) a condition which is remarkably similar to GIAD.
This study will determine the depth of burn achieved on fresh and healthy small bowel
explants using a dedicated small bowel RFA catheter at usual RFA settings.
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