Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of our work of optimization of the treatment of postoperative hernias is to improve the results of treatment of patients with median and median-lateral postoperative hernias of medium (W2) and large (W3) sizes by developing new surgical techniques. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. To study the topographic and variant anatomy of vessels and nerves in the retromuscular, preperitoneal, postperitoneal and pre-abdominal cell spaces of the anterior abdominal wall. To determine the most probable sources of blood flow and lymph from the anatomical formations forming the bed of the endoprosthesis. 2. To develop technical, surgical techniques that allow to form an implant bed with minimal traumatization of blood vessels and nerves and reduce the risk of postoperative complications. 3. To develop a technique for plasty of the anterior abdominal wall in mid-lateral postoperative hernias with a combination of retromuscular and subaponeurotic spaces. The researchers will compare an experimental group in which a new method of preparing the implant place will be used and a control group in which standard methods of treating postoperative ventral hernias were used to see whether the new method affects the improvement of the postoperative period and the reduction of complications.


Clinical Trial Description

Relevance of the research topic: The problem of surgical treatment of postoperative ventral hernias (POVG) remains relevant to the present time. PWS account for 20-22% of the total number of hernias and occupy the second place in frequency of occurrence after inguinal hernias. Despite the rapid development of minimally invasive technologies in abdominal surgery, according to various authors, the frequency of occurrence of POVG after elective operations reaches 4-18.1%, and after urgent operations - 18.1-58.7% (Ishutov I.V. et al. 2020, 2018, 2016, Krivoshchekov E.P. et al. 2018, Samartsev V.A., Gavrilov V.A. 2018, 2016, Lu. Y, et al 2021). The use of mesh implants in the treatment of POVH reduced the number of relapses, but led to an increase in the frequency of postoperative wound complications, reaching, according to various authors, impressive figures - 20.9-49.2% (Ermakov N.A. et al. 2020, 2018; Greyasov V.I. et al. 2018) Complications of hernioplasty lead to an increase in postoperative beda day and an outpatient period of follow-up treatment, a sharp increase in material costs for treatment. Treatment of late complications of allogernioplasty (postoperative fistulas, mesh implant rejections) requires repeated additional hospitalizations and outpatient treatment courses (Botezatu A.A. et al., 2018, 2016; Gogia B.Sh., Alyautdinov R.R. 2018, Olsson A, et al 2021). In modern times, one of the priority areas of scientific research in herniology is the improvement of prosthetic plastics and the development of methods for the prevention of seromas, which are the most common complication of the course of the postoperative period and occur in a wide range from 0.8% to 60% (Belokonev V.I. Grachev B.D. 2018, Galimov O.V. et al. 2018, 2016, Paasch C, et al. 2021, 2019) Retromuscular plasty of the anterior abdominal wall is currently the most physiological and reliable method of surgery for hernias of median localization. Optimal methods of plastic surgery for median and lateral hernias are indicated, including in clinical recommendations, but the question of plastic surgery for ventral postoperative hernias of median-lateral localization remains open. (Clinical recommendations "Postoperative ventral hernia", 2017) Variant anatomy of vessels and nerves of the anterior abdominal wall for herniologists is important in the development of surgical techniques that minimize traumatization of neurovascular bundles during anterior abdominal wall plastic surgery. In this way, it is possible to reduce blood and lymph flow from cellular spaces, preserve the neurovascular trophic anatomical formations of the anterior abdominal wall and reduce the risk of postoperative complications. Based on the above, the development of surgical techniques that minimize traumatization of neurovascular bundles is an urgent task. The development of plastic methods for combined mid-lateral hernias is also an urgent task of modern surgery. The aim of the study: To improve the results of treatment of patients with median and median-lateral postoperative hernias of medium (W2) and large (W3) sizes by developing new surgical techniques. Research objectives: 1. To study the topographic and variant anatomy of the vessels and nerves of the retromuscular, preperitoneal, post-peritoneal and pre-bubble cellular spaces of the anterior abdominal wall. To determine the most probable sources of blood and lymph flow from the anatomical formations forming the bed of the endoprosthesis. 2. To develop technical, surgical techniques that allow to form an implant bed with minimal traumatization of blood vessels and nerves and reduce the risk of postoperative complications. 3. To develop a technique for plasty of the anterior abdominal wall in mid-lateral postoperative hernias with the combination of retromuscular and subaponeurotic spaces. 4. To test the developed methods in the clinic, to evaluate their effectiveness at the stages of immediate results from the standpoint of evidence-based medicine. 5. To investigate the long-term results of using the developed methods. Materials and methods of research It is planned to analyze the results of CT scans of 20 patients with Incisional ventral hernia to study the features of blood supply to the anterior abdominal wall using the Autoplan hardware software package. The experimental part It is planned to study the variant anatomy of the anterior abdominal wall on 20 unfixed corpses. To study: - the presence of vessels perforating the white line of the abdomen; - vessels behind the xiphoid process and the lower third of the sternum; - vessels of the pre-bubble space; - how far the intercostal neurovascular bundles (SNPs) go into the retromuscular space, how to minimize their intersection when preparing the implant bed. - Separately investigate the retromuscular and subaponeurotic spaces and ways of combining them. Clinical part 1. The study will include patients with postoperative ventral hernias of median and lateral localization and an average hernial gate width from 4.1 to 15 cm (W2-W3 according to the EHS classification).. The size of the hernial gate is determined by CT. The estimated number of patients is 60-80. 25-30 patients with median-lateral ventral postoperative hernias and 35-50 patients with median hernias are expected. 2. The control group is retrospective. It will include patients who have been operated on for Incisional ventral hernia in the surgical department No. 1 of the KPH during the last 3 years (25-35) and 5-10 patients who will be operated on within the next 6-8 months. 3. The established group - patients who will be operated on in the surgical department No. 1 of the KPH over the next 1.5 - 2 years, using the developed techniques. 4. The comparison groups will include patients who underwent retromuscular plastic surgery followed by aspiration drainage of the prosthesis bed. The analysis of the results will necessarily take into account the presence of obesity and coagulopathy. In addition to general clinical studies, CT before surgery and dynamic ultrasound examination of the anterior abdominal wall after surgery will be performed. Particular attention will be paid to the presence and volume of fluid formations in the implant bed. 5. Immediate results will be evaluated up to 1 year Criteria for evaluating immediate results: Treatment time, pain syndrome, the presence of seromas and hematomas, their infection and suppuration. According to the Clavien-Dindo scale, complications belong to class 3B. 6. . Long-term results will be evaluated in terms from 1 to 1.5 years. Evaluation criteria: the presence of recurrent hernia, the presence of late complications - fistulas, seromas requiring drainage, pain syndrome. The data obtained will be evaluated using the IBM SPSS Advanced Statistica application package. The results of the study will be generated using Word, Excel, and Microsoft Office software. In the course of the work, modern statistical research methods will be used: descriptive statistics, methods for assessing the significance of differences using parametric and nonparametric criteria, methods of correlation and variance analysis, cluster analysis, forecasting using logistic regressions. Planned scientific novelty and practical value 1. It is planned to study potential sources of bleeding and hematoma formation during SRM plastic surgery. On this basis, recommendations on the technique of the operation will be formulated. 2. It is supposed to find a way to preserve intercostal neurovascular bundles when performing SRM plasty. This should improve the quality of abdominal wall reconstruction by preserving neurovascular bundles of muscles and reducing neuroalgic pain syndrome. 3. It is proposed to develop a method for combining retromuscular and subaponeurotic spaces in the treatment of mid-lateral hernias 4. It is planned to substantiate the effectiveness and expediency of the application of the developed surgical techniques based on the analysis of the immediate and long-term results of treatment. A brief description of the planned innovations 1. Development of a new method of plasty of the anterior abdominal wall of mid-lateral postoperative ventral hernias 2. Development of techniques to minimize traumatization of the neurovascular bundles of the anterior abdominal wall and reduce postoperative complications. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05734222
Study type Interventional
Source Samara State Medical University
Contact Alexander Grigiryevich
Phone +79272024050
Email a.g.sonis@samsmu.ru
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 29, 2022
Completion date May 23, 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06016426 - Mass Closure vs Layer by Layer Closure N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT03105895 - Prevention of Incisional Hernia With an Onlay Mesh Visible on MRI N/A
Completed NCT02089958 - Standardization of Laparoscopic Hernia Repair N/A
Completed NCT01961687 - A Prospective, Multi-Center Study of Phasix™ Mesh for Ventral or Incisional Hernia Repair. N/A
Completed NCT00998907 - PDS*Plus and Wound Infections After Laparotomy N/A
Terminated NCT00498810 - COMplete Versus PArtial Open inCisional Hernia Repair (COMPAC-TRIAL) N/A
Completed NCT04961346 - RCT Comparing Lightweight vs. Heavyweight Meshes in Incisional Hernia Repair N/A
Terminated NCT03912662 - ProGripTM Self-Gripping Polyester Mesh in Incisional Hernia Prevention N/A
Recruiting NCT05620121 - ACute Treatment of Incisional Ventral Hernia
Recruiting NCT03561727 - Risk Factors for Development of Incisional Hernia in Transverse Incisions N/A
Completed NCT03938688 - Randomized Control Trial Comparing Transfascial Suture for Mesh Fixation to No Mesh Fixation N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05568238 - Vacuum Assisted Wound Closure and Permanent On-lay Mesh-mediated Fascial Traction in Patients With Open Abdomen N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02896686 - Efficacy of an Onlay Mesh for Prevention of Incisional Hernia After Loop Ileostomy Closure Phase 4
Recruiting NCT02277262 - PROPHYlactic Implantation of BIOlogic Mesh in Peritonitis (PROPHYBIOM) Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT02328352 - "BP as a New Device for Surgery and Solid Cancer and Hematopoietic System Tumors Treatment. Effects of BP Implantation" Phase 1/Phase 2
Suspended NCT01520168 - Composix Kugel Mesh Recall Leaves Unresolved Problems of Patient Management N/A
Completed NCT05579652 - Change in Fascial Tension in Open Abdomens
Active, not recruiting NCT03390764 - Hernia After Colorectal Cancer Surgery N/A
Completed NCT02321059 - Validation of the Goodstrength System for Assessment of Abdominal Wall Strength in Patients With Incisional Hernia N/A
Completed NCT01740882 - Risk of Recurrence After Incisional Hernia Repair With Mesh Fixation With Absorbable Versus Non-absorbable Tacks N/A