Gallstones Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility of Transvaginal Cholecystectomy
Today there are three different ways to remove a gallbladder with gallstones. Surgeons can
remove the gallbladder through small incisions in the abdomen. This is called laparoscopic
cholecystectomy. It is the current standard. It has replaced traditional open gallbladder
surgery. Open gallbladder surgery is done with a large incision. A new way of removing the
gallbladder in women is through the vagina. This is called transvaginal cholecystectomy.
This study is being done to see if removing the gallbladder through the vagina will work for
patients at Mayo Clinic Rochester. This is the first step of this research to test the
procedure. In the future, other studies will examine the potential for less scarring and
reduced pain. In this study the investigators will still make small incisions in the
abdomen, they will be smaller than the standard procedure but you will still have some scars
on your abdomen.
Some very early research reports say that some patients may have less pain with the
transvaginal approach; however, the investigators do not know if the transvaginal route will
have any effect on your overall health and quality of life.
This study will evaluate:
- Effectiveness of the surgery: ability to remove the gallbladder safely
- Effect of the operation on your body: change in pulse and blood pressure during the
surgery, level of inflammation markers in your blood before and after the surgery
- Recovery from surgery in the hospital: how much pain you have, how much pain medication
you need, how long you need to stay in the hospital, or nature of any surgical
complications (problems)
- Overall recovery from surgery: general quality of life, abdominal symptoms
What is the new type of surgery?
The new type of surgery is called transvaginal cholecystectomy:
A small incision is made in the vagina. An endoscope (flexible lighted camera tube) is
inserted into the abdomen. An endoscope is normally used to examine your stomach or colon. A
very small camera is placed in your abdomen at the belly button (5 mm, ¼ inch). This helps
the surgeons to remove your gallbladder through the vagina. The procedure to separate your
gallbladder from your body will be assisted by instruments placed through your abdomen and
instruments placed in your vagina. The surgeon will remove the gallbladder by passing it
though your vagina.
As technologic innovations in medicine continue to advance, less intrusive operative
procedures are being developed. Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES) may
represent a less invasive approach to the abdominal cavity. The access to the abdominal
cavity through natural orifices such as the vagina has the benefit of decreased
somato-sensory innervation. This venue might confer less pain and operative stress to the
patient. The transvaginal approach has been suggested as a new surgical approach to
gallbladder surgery (cholecystectomy). Approximately 700 transvaginal cholecystectomy
procedures have been performed in medical centers around the world so far. Anecdotal data
suggest that the patients experience less pain postoperatively and half of them may not
require any pain medication. Currently, introduction of this new operative approach outside
of a research study is not supported by national nor international societies.
We wish to demonstrate that the transvaginal approach is feasible for 10 patients with
gallstone disease at Mayo Clinic Rochester (MCR).
Methods: Female patients seen by consultants from the Division of General and
Gastrointestinal Surgery, who have an appropriate indication for elective cholecystectomy,
will be offered a cholecystectomy via the transvaginal approach. After patient enrollment,
baseline demographics, questionnaires and blood draws will be obtained. The patient will
undergo a laparoscopic assisted transvaginal cholecystectomy by a dedicated surgical team,
consisting of a gynecologist, a minimally invasive surgeon and a gastroenterologist. This
approach will utilize a 5-mm umbilical trocar and a posterior colpotomy. Standard
laparoscopic and flexible endoscopic instrumentation will be utilized along with recently
introduced long flexible-tip laparoscopic instrumentation to remove the gallbladder.
Intraoperative parameters will be recorded. Postoperatively blood draws and questionnaires
will be repeated at specific intervals.
Data analysis will be mainly descriptive for this feasibility study. The collected material
will serve as pilot data for a future comparative study of transvaginal cholecystectomy with
standard laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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