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Distal Pancreatectomy clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Distal Pancreatectomy.

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NCT ID: NCT06289803 Recruiting - Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trials

The Application of Probe Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy in Pancreatic Tumor Surgery

Start date: September 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Aim of the study: To evaluate the value of Probe Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (PCLE) in surgery for pancreatic tumor. Methods: Patients who are diagnosed with pancreatic tumor based on preoperative radiographic findings and will undergo radical resection are included in this clinical study. PCLE will be used in surgery to identify tumor is malignant or not, and surgeons will decide procedures of surgery based on outcomes of PCLE. In this present study, clinical trials will be divided into two phases. In the first phase, based on the definitive postoperative pathologic diagnosis, characteristic imaging structures that were collected by PCLE will be identified and primary diagnostic imaging criteria for pancreatic cancer would be developed. In the second phase, this criterion will be used for rapid intraoperative diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and predicting status of resection margin. In addition, accuracy of PCLE will be verified based on postoperative pathologic reports.

NCT ID: NCT06123013 Recruiting - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

Music Therapy in Patients Undergoing Pancreatic Surgery (MUSIC PUPS)

MUSIC PUPS
Start date: February 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pilot single arm non-randomized trial to determine the feasibility and acceptability of: 1) a tailored music-assisted relaxation and imagery intervention; 2) biological sample collection; and 3) mobile device patient-reported outcome (MDPRO) collection in adults hospitalized for pancreatic surgery experiencing acute pain.

NCT ID: NCT04220931 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Distal Pancreatectomy

Intrapapillary Botulinum Toxin Injection for PREvention of Post-surgical PAncREactic Fistula

PREPARE
Start date: March 27, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Surgery is required for the treatment of many pancreatic conditions, either malignant or benign. Mortality of pancreatic surgery can be up to 3% even in expert centers. Morbidity is high, postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF) being the main postoperative complication. In its current definition (drain output of any measurable fluid >= postoperative day 3 with amylase content >3 times the serum amylase activity and with clinical consequence), the incidence of postoperative PF is between 15 and 30 %. Most POPF resolve spontaneously but when refractory POPF occurs, it may lead to severe complications. POPF severity is graded as follows: grade B in case of change in medical management: infection without organ failure, specific medication (total parenteral nutrition, somatostatin analogs, antibiotics), persistent drainage > 3 weeks, angiographic procedure for bleeding, prolonged hospital stay; grade C in case of reoperation or PF-related organ failure or death. No specific prophylactic treatment of POPF is currently recommended by clinical guidelines. In clinical research, many prophylactic strategies have been attempted with partial efficacy. Endoscopic pancreatic sphincterotomy with plastic stent placement is effective in pre-and postoperative management of pancreatic fistula but with the need of a highly competent interventional endoscopist. Intrapapillary botulinum toxin injection is believed to induce relaxation of the pancreatic sphincter, leading to a " pharmacological " pancreatic sphincterotomy without any morbidity. A recent phase I/II prospective study has shown promising results in this indication, with no clinically relevant pancreatic fistula when botulinum toxin was injected. Based on this observation we hypothesize that intrapapillary botulinum toxin injection during an endoscopic procedure before surgery could be effective for the prevention of post-surgical pancreatic fistula

NCT ID: NCT03880773 Recruiting - Pancreatic Fistula Clinical Trials

Comparison Between Two Methods of Pancreatic Transection in Distal Pancreatectomy

TRUDY
Start date: July 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Several systematic reviews have investigated the management of the pancreatic stump in order to reduce the postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF) rate after distal pancreatectomy (DP). The appropriate closure technique of the pancreatic stump is still debated. There is no published experience about the comparison of the Endo GIA Reinforced Reload with Tri-Staple Technology (TS) versus Harmonic Focus (US) after distal pancreatectomy (DP) regarding the reduction of POPF. The investigators want to compare the incidence of clinically-relevant POPF (CR-POPF) after DP, depending upon the transection technique (TS versus US). This is a randomized controlled, multicenter, patient-blinded, superiority trial. This protocol was designed according to the SPIRIT guidelines. Two groups of 76 patients (152 in total) with an indication for elective minimally invasive or open DP for a lesion of the body-tail of the pancreas. The two techniques analyzed are Endo GIA Reinforced Reload with Tri-Staple Technology (TS) and Harmonic Focus (US) as control. The primary endpoint is to evaluate the incidence of CR-POPF rate after DP. Secondary endpoints are intraoperative outcomes (blood loss, operative time and conversion of the minimally invasive procedure), postoperative outcomes (complications rate; hospitalization parameters to 90 days; mortality) and treatment costs.