Chronic Pancreatitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Endoscopic Versus Surgical Treatment of Chronic Pancreatitis - A Randomized Controlled Trial
Chronic pancreatitis is a progressive inflammatory disease of the pancreas characterized by destruction of pancreatic parenchyma and subsequent fibrosis. Patients with chronic pancreatitis can be treated with medical management, endoscopic therapy and surgical treatment. Among the various theories of causation of pain in chronic pancreatitis, there is theory of ductal hypertension. In this the pancreatic duct obstruction resulting in ductal dilatation, ductal hypertension and parenchymal hypertension is thought to be the cause of pain. For patients with dilated ducts, ductal decompression is advocated. Ductal decompression can be achieved by endoscopy and by surgery. Surgery comprises of lateral pancreaticojejunostomy with or without headcoring. Endoscopic treatment includes sphincterotomy, dilatation of strictures, removal of stones with or without extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) and stenting. The pros and cons of endoscopic versus surgical therapy are debated. Lateral pancreaticojejunostomy relieves chronic abdominal pain in 65%-93% of patients. Morbidity and mortality rates are generally low, averaging 20% and 2%, respectively. Long-term follow-up of patients after lateral pancreaticojejunostomy reveals that up to 50% of patients develop recurrent symptoms and 10%-35% fail to obtain pain relief. Studies indicate that more than 60% of patients undergoing pancreatic endotherapy are pain free 1 year after the procedure. There are only two randomized controlled trials comparing endoscopic treatment with the surgical therapy. In this study the investigators will be conducting a randomized trial, to compare endoscopic and surgical treatment of chronic pancreatitis. Outcome variables measured in the study will include pain relief, quality of life, morbidity, mortality, length of hospital stay and changes in pancreatic function.
Chronic pancreatitis is a progressive inflammatory disease of the pancreas characterized by
destruction of pancreatic parenchyma and subsequent fibrosis. The prevalence of chronic
pancreatitis has been found to be very high in southern India (114-200/100 000 population).
Alcohol is the most common etiology worldwide, while idiopathic pancreatitis is the most
common type in India and China, accounting for approximately 70% of all cases of chronic
pancreatitis. It is a cause of considerable morbidity in the form of pain, steatorrhea and
diabetes mellitus. Natural history of chronic pancreatitis is characterized by variable
course stretching over decades with recurrent acute pancreatitis in the early stage and
steatorrhea, diabetes and pancreatic calcification in the later stages. Pain is a prominent
clinical feature of chronic pancreatitis and the most troublesome symptom for which medical
attention is often sought. Unfortunately, despite much work, the pathophysiology of pain in
CP remains poorly understood. Multiple factors have been suspected, which include
inflammation, encasement of sensory nerves by the fibrotic process and neuropathy, and duct
obstruction, which can lead to high back pressure and parenchymal ischemia. Increased
pressure in the main pancreatic duct is likely to be an important cause of pain,
particularly in patients with duct dilatation. This explanation forms the conceptual basis
for both endoscopic and surgical drainage procedures. Approximately one half of patients
with pain owing to chronic pancreatitis come to an intervention aimed principally at pain
relief, along with relief of bile duct, duodenal, and major venous obstruction. Patients
with chronic pancreatitis can be treated with medical management, endoscopic therapy and
surgical treatment. For patients with dilated ducts, ductal decompression is advocated. The
pros and cons of endoscopic versus surgical therapy are debated.
The modified Puestow or lateral pancreaticojejunostomy is the most commonly employed
surgical procedure. Lateral pancreaticojejunostomy relieves chronic abdominal pain in
65%-93% of patients. Morbidity and mortality rates are generally low, averaging 20% and 2%,
respectively. Long-term follow-up of patients after lateral pancreaticojejunostomy reveals
that up to 50% of patients develop recurrent symptoms and 10%-35% fail to obtain pain
relief.
Overall more than 60% of patients undergoing pancreatic endotherapy are pain free 1 year
after the procedure. There are only two randomized controlled trials comparing endoscopic
treatment with the surgical therapy.
Dite et al. reported the first trial. Surgery consisted of resection (80 %) and drainage (20
%) procedures, while endotherapy included sphincterotomy and stenting (52 %) and/or stone
removal (23 %). In the entire group, the initial success rates were similar for both groups,
but at the 5-year follow-up, complete absence of pain was more frequent after surgery (37 %
vs. 14 %), with the rate of partial relief being similar (49 % vs. 51 %). In the randomized
subgroup, results were similar (pain absence 34 % after surgery vs. 15 % after endotherapy,
relief 52 % after surgery vs. 46 % after endotherapy). The increase in body weight was also
greater by 20 - 25 % in the surgical group, while new-onset diabetes developed with similar
frequency in both groups (34 - 43 %), again with no differences between the results for the
whole group and the randomized subgroup. The authors concluded that surgery is superior to
endotherapy for long-term pain reduction in patients with painful obstructive chronic
pancreatitis.
Cahen et al. reported the second trial. All symptomatic patients with chronic pancreatitis
and a distal obstruction of the pancreatic duct but without an inflammatory mass were
eligible for the study. Thirty-nine patients underwent randomization: 19 to endoscopic
treatment (16 of whom underwent lithotripsy) and 20 to operative pancreaticojejunostomy.
During the 24 months of follow-up, patients who underwent surgery, as compared with those
who were treated endoscopically, had lower Izbicki pain scores (25 vs. 51, P<0.001) and
better physical health summary scores on the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form
General Health Survey questionnaire (P=0.003). At the end of follow-up, complete or partial
pain relief was achieved in 32% of patients assigned to endoscopic drainage as compared with
75% of patients assigned to surgical drainage (P=0.007). Rates of complications, length of
hospital stay, and changes in pancreatic function were similar in the two treatment groups,
but patients receiving endoscopic treatment required more procedures than did patients in
the surgery group (a median of eight vs. three, P<0.001). Authors concluded that surgical
drainage of the pancreatic duct was more effective than endoscopic treatment in patients
with obstruction of the pancreatic duct due to chronic pancreatitis.
Both these trials had a small sample size. The population studied was also different. ESWL
was not included in protocol in one of the trials. In one of the trials only pancreatic duct
drainage was chosen as the surgical therapy. The proposed study will compare surgery with
endoscopic therapy in Indian population with chronic pancreatitis. The outcomes compared
would include pain relief, quality of life, morbidity, mortality, length of hospital stay
and changes in pancreatic endocrine and exocrine function.
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