Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Hemorrhoidal disease (HD) is a common health problem, affecting up to 38,9% of adult population. HD is also a common finding in up to 36% of cirrhotic patients, as hemorrhoidal plexus is a possible site of portosystemic venous anastomosis. Cirrhotic patients represent a group often neglected in clinical trials so, little is known about the optimal treatment for HD these patients. The objective of this study is to prospectively evaluate the efficacy and safety of treatment of grade I, II and III internal HD with polidocanol foam in cirrhotic patients.


Clinical Trial Description

Hemorrhoidal disease (HD) is a common health problem, affecting up to 38,9% of adult population. Despite being a benign condition, associated symptoms like bleeding, pain, prolapsing, swelling, itching, and mucus soiling impact considerably on patients' quality of life. HD is also a common finding in up to 36% of cirrhotic patients, as hemorrhoidal plexus is a possible site of portosystemic venous anastomosis. Despite portal hypertension does not increase the prevalence of hemorrhoids, elevated portal venous pressure, with a not so rare contribution of coagulopathy, may result in massive, life-threatening hemorrhoidal bleeding, unlike the normal population. Besides, internal HD bleeding is the most frequently identified cause of bleeding with origin on the lower gastrointestinal tract among cirrhotic patients with severe hematochezia . HD treatment can be grouped into conservative (diet, lifestyle changes, laxatives, anti-inflammatory drugs, phlebotonics), office-based (sclerotherapy, ligation, photocoagulation, laser photocoagulation, among others) and surgical (hemorrhoidectomy, hemorrhoidopexy). The choice of therapy should be oriented by the Goligher's classification, or a symptom score such as Rørvik's Hemorrhoidal Disease Symptom Score (HDSS). Cirrhotic patients represent a group often neglected in clinical trials so, little is known about the optimal treatment for HD these patients. Surgical treatment with stapled hemorrhoidopexy has been described in cirrhotic patients as a feasible and safe approach, but with up to 46,7% of the procedures complicated with postoperative staple-line bleeding, although all of them managed with conservative treatment without reoperation or death. Recently, Ashraf et al compared hemorrhoidectomy performed using rubber band ligation (RBL) with conventional hemorrhoidectomy in 40 randomized patients with liver disease and diagnosed with grade I, II, or III HD. Intraoperative blood loss was lower in RBL group (1.2 ± 1.6 ml vs 22.2 ± 6.58 ml, p=0,001), as well as operative time (9.00 ± 2.449 min vs 24.100 ± 3.669 min, p=0,001). Importantly, postoperative pain (35% vs 100%, p=0,001), bleeding (15% vs 45%, p=0,022) and urine retention (20% vs 55%, p=0,011) were lower in the RBL group, along with time of hospital stay (8.6 ± 2.54 h vs 60.65 ± 41.93, p=0,002) and time of wound healing (16.85 ± 1.87 days vs 31.00 ± 3.57 days, p=0,003). Bearing in mind the high rate of surgical complications in cirrhotic patients, these results suggest that office-based treatments, may be the preferred treatment for cirrhotic patients with HD grades I to III. Awad et al, compared the efficacy of endoscopic injection sclerotherapy (EIS) to RBL in the treatment of bleeding internal hemorrhoids in 120 adult patients with liver cirrhosis. Both techniques were highly effective in the control of bleeding with a low rebleeding [10% in the EBL group and 13.33% in the EIS group] and recurrence [20% in the EBL group and 20% in the EIS group] rates; also, EBL had significantly less pain and higher patient satisfaction than EIS. However, these authors have used liquid sclerosing agents (either ethanolamine oleate 5% or N-butyl cyanoacrylate). A recent portuguese study by Fernandes et al has evaluated the efficacy and safety of a sclerosing agent, polidocanol, foam injection in 2000 consecutive patients with prolapsed hemorrhoids (grades II/III/IV). This technique showed high efficacy (98%) and tolerability (92% with mild/no pain) with only 0,7% of serious complications (major bleeding n=3; urinary retention n=4; infection/suppuration requiring surgery n=2). Also, in this cohort, 210 patients (10,5%) were under anticoagulation or double antiplatelet therapy) and only 2 of these patients presented clinically significant bleeding. The authors conclude that polidocanol foam should be used as first-line treatment of most hemorrhoid patient, including those under anticoagulation and antiplatelet therapy. Nevertheless, no cirrhotic patients were included, so results cannot be generalized to this particular high-risk group. The objective of this study is to prospectively evaluate the efficacy and safety of treatment of grade I, II and III internal hemorrhoidal disease with polidocanol foam in cirrhotic patients. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05807425
Study type Interventional
Source Universidade do Porto
Contact Paulo Salgueiro, MD PhD
Phone 00351222077500
Email paulosalgueiro@gmail.com
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2/Phase 3
Start date March 31, 2023
Completion date December 31, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04533932 - Endosonographic Shear Wave Elastography for Liver Stiffness
Not yet recruiting NCT06031740 - A Comparison of Flexible Endoscopic Polidocanol Liquid and Foam Sclerotherapy in Cirrhotic Patients With Bleeding From Internal Hemorrhoids N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06026267 - Efficacy of Conventional Dose Protocol vs Low Dose Protocol Albumin Use in Patients With Cirrhosis and High Risk Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06076330 - Efficacy of 5% Albumin v/s Plasmalyte in Combination With 20% Albumin for Fluid Resuscitation in Cirrhosis With Sepsis Induced Hypotension N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05055713 - A Randomized Controlled Study on the Treatment of Cirrhosis Combined With Hypersplenism N/A
Recruiting NCT04578301 - Predicting Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure After Surgical Intervention in Chronic Liver Disease
Not yet recruiting NCT05120557 - Point-of-care Ultrasound Screening and Assessment of Chronic Liver Diseases and NASH N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05515861 - Evaluation of EUS in Preventing Rebleeding After Endoscopic Cyanoacrylate Injection for Gastric Varices N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03623360 - Functional MRI to Determine Severity of Cirrhosis
Not yet recruiting NCT02710227 - Sleep Timing and Circadian Preferences in A Sample of Egyptian Patients With Hepatic Cirrhosis N/A
Completed NCT02917408 - Retrospective Study About Primary Biliary Cholangitis During January 2001 to July 2016 at West China Hospital
Active, not recruiting NCT02551250 - Annual MRI Versus Biannual US for Surveillance of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Liver Cirrhosis
Recruiting NCT02239991 - Management of Perioperative Coagulopathy With Thromboelastometry (ROTEM) in Liver Transplant N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT02256514 - Open Label Trial of Immunotherapy for Advanced Liver Cancer Phase 2
Terminated NCT02311985 - Comparison of Three Transfusion Strategies for Central Venous Catheterization in Cirrhotics: A Randomized Clinical Trial N/A
Terminated NCT01937130 - Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic Study of IDN-6556 in ACLF Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01724697 - Safety and Efficacy of Human Bone Marrow Stem Cells for Treatment of HBV-related Liver Cirrhosis Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01728688 - Safety and Efficacy of Human Autologous Peripheral Blood Stem Cells for Treatment of HBV-related Liver Cirrhosis Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01728727 - Safety and Efficacy of Human Umbilical Cord Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Treatment of HBV-related Liver Cirrhosis Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01618890 - Hepatic Venous Pressure Gradient-guided Versus Standard Beta-blocker Therapy in Primary Prevention of Variceal Bleeding Phase 3