Diverticulitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Laparoscopic Versus Open Sigmoid Colectomy for Diverticular Disease: A Prospective Randomized Single-Blind Trial
Aim: This is a prospective, randomized comparison of traditional open (OS) and laparoscopic
sigmoidectomy (LS) in patients with complicated diverticular disease. The study is designed
in order to minimize bias by standardizing the two procedures and blinding patients and
nurses during the preoperative and early postoperative period.
Hypothesis: A laparoscopic approach for sigmoidectomy has significant advantages over the
open technique with respect to postoperative pain, duration of ileus, length of hospital
stay, and perioperative morbidity.
Methods: Patients with complicated diverticular disease who are candidates for elective
sigmoidectomy will be randomized the day before surgery, and anaesthetic technique and
postoperative management will be standardized between groups. Surgeons with experience in
both laparoscopic-assisted and open colectomy will perform both types of procedures. At the
end of the operation, identical, opaque wound dressings will be applied and left in place
until postoperative day 4. Both patients and nursing staff will therefore be blinded to the
type of surgical technique during the early postoperative period.
Endpoints:
A) Postoperative pain assessed by the Visual Analog Scale at postoperative days 1, 2, and 3.
B) Postoperative intake of systemic opiates (morphine)
C) Duration of postoperative ileus, quantified by the interval in hours between the end of
the procedure and passage of first stool.
D) Duration of hospital stay.
E) Surgical complications, such as wound infection, anastomotic leakage, bleeding
F) General medical complications, such as cardiopulmonary, pneumonia, and renal failure.
Rationale: This study will determine whether a laparoscopic sigmoidectomy is associated with
significant clinical advantages over the traditional open approach when patients with
complicated diverticular disease are blinded to the operative technique.
Colonic diverticulosis is an increasingly common condition in the Western societies; in our
country, a third of the population is affected by the 6th decade and two-thirds by the 9th
decade. Fortunately, a majority of patients with diverticulosis remain asymptomatic;
diverticulitis, the most common presentation of complicated diverticular disease, has an
estimated incidence of 10 patients per 100,000/year.
Colonic diverticular disease is usually restricted to the sigmoid colon, and conservative
treatment with antibiotics is indicated in cases of a first attack of uncomplicated
diverticulitis, the rationale being that a majority of patients treated for a first episode
of acute inflammation will eventually recover and have no further problems.
Elective sigmoidectomy is currently recommended in the following clinical situations:
1. Patients who had two episodes of uncomplicated diverticulitis.
2. Patients who had one episode of complicated (perforated) diverticulitis, with either
pericolic of pelvic abscesses (Hinchey stage I and II respectively), fistula formation
and/or stenosis.
Resection of the sigmoid colon is now commonly performed by laparoscopy, and a number of
non-randomized publications have demonstrated that this approach is safe and feasible in
patients with diverticular disease. The theoretical advantages of celioscopy over the open
techniques include decreased postoperative pain, a shorter duration of postoperative ileus
and hospital stay, and improved cosmetic. Surprisingly, however, most published data on the
topic are restricted to case-control series, and so far the putative advantages of
laparoscopy have not been substantiated through a prospective randomized trial.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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