Cholelithiasis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Management of CBD Stones at Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy: A NSW Collaborative Prospective Randomised Trial to Assess the Value of Transcystically Inserted CBD Stents to Facilitate Post-Operative ERCP
This study is designed to assess whether a new technique called facilitated endoscopic
retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is or is not superior to conventional ERCP for
removing stones found in the bile duct at the time of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. ERCP is
an endoscopic procedure used to facilitate the radiological examination and subsequent
manipulation of the common bile duct (eg. opening it up, which is called sphincterotomy).
Both facilitated and conventional ERCP are performed as a separate procedure after the
initial gallbladder surgery. This is a comparative study of these two techniques in a
randomised clinical trial.
The aim of this randomised clinical trial is to enable surgeons to decide whether placement
of a plastic stent at the time of laparoscopic cholecystectomy will improve the success rate
and safety of subsequent ERCP and sphincterotomy.
Symptomatic gallstone disease is common. In the year July 2001-2002, laparoscopic
cholecystectomy was performed on 5,235 patients in NSW public hospitals. Up to 18% of
patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy for gallstones may have concomitant common
bile duct stones (choledocholithiasis). Twenty-five percent of bile duct stones are
completely unsuspected. Therefore the optimal management of bile duct stones is a
significant issue for all general surgeons who perform this very common operation. Yet, the
management of these patients in the laparoscopic era remains contentious.
Prior to the laparoscopic era cholecystectomy patients with bile duct stones were managed
surgically during open cholecystectomy (OC), with direct exploration of their common bile
duct (choledochotomy). However, open surgical bile duct exploration waned in popularity and
progressively stones were dealt with endoscopically, either pre or post cholecystectomy. As
laparoscopic technology advances, simultaneous clearance of the bile duct at the time of
laparoscopic cholecystectomy is regaining popularity.
Some surgeons elect to remove bile duct stones at the index operation through the cystic
duct. This approach has a success rate of between 75 and 90%. When there is failure to clear
the bile duct transcystically, some surgeons proceed to a choledochotomy to clear the duct,
while others close the cystic duct stump, leaving the stones in situ to be removed at a
later date by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and sphincterotomy. The
argument in favour of immediate choledochotomy is that the duct may be cleared in one
sitting. The argument against it is that the morbidity of choledochotomy is considerable.
The argument for a subsequent ERCP is that the morbidity of choledochotomy is avoided. The
argument against subsequent ERCP is that there may be difficulty cannulating the common bile
duct and that ERCP with sphincterotomy is associated with a significant morbidity,
particularly pancreatitis.
An alternative approach taken by the majority of surgeons in NSW when confronted by common
bile duct stones at laparoscopic cholecystectomy is to close the cystic duct stump in all
patients, without exploring the duct transcystically. Stones are left in situ, to be removed
at a later date endoscopically - by ERCP and sphincterotomy. The attendant risks of this
approach are mentioned above.
Another approach is to facilitate the performance of post-operative ERCP and sphincterotomy
by inserting a stent transcystically at the time of laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Facilitated ERCP has recently been reported in a prospective consecutive series from Nepean
Hospital. Failure to access the common bile duct at first attempt was 1.2% in this series,
which compares favourably with duct access failure rates - reported in the literature - of
5-12% without the facilitation of a stent. The incidence of pancreatitis, bleeding and
duodenal perforation after facilitated ERCP was 0%, 0% and 0.6%, respectively. Two cases
(1.2%) of cholangitis were also reported. Comparison to other series suggests that
facilitated ERCP offers real advantages over the conventional unfacilitated ERCP for bile
duct stone removal, which has a reported pancreatitis rate of 2–11% (and our own rate of
8%); a bleeding rate of 2-4 % and a duodenal perforation rate of 1-4%. The mortality rates
of these ERCP techniques cannot be compared at this preliminary stage because of
insufficient numbers in the Nepean series.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Educational/Counseling/Training
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