Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Diagnosis and Treatment of Laparoscopy for Malignant Ovarian Cancer: an Open-label, Parallel, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial of Efficacy and Safety
This trial is designed to compare diagnostic and therapeutic effects of laparoscopy vs. laparotomy on early malignant ovarian cancer, and to evaluate the efficacy and safety of laparoscopy in early malignant ovarian cancer.
The principle for treating early-stage ovarian cancer is first to stage the cancer, and then
to determine the optimal surgical and non-surgical treatments. Ovarian cancers mainly
metastasize as extensive diffusions on surfaces of organs in the abdominal cavity. Although
the most common ovarian cancer staging method is laparotomy, this procedure often misses
upper abdominal metastases, especially on the diaphragm muscles, thus leading to inaccurate
staging and prognostic assessments, and insufficient treatment.
A laparoscopic approach allows closer observation of relevant tissues, as these tissues are
magnified in laparoscopies, which facilitates discovery of small lesions on surfaces of
diaphragmatic muscle, liver and stomach fundus. Laparoscopes allow lavage of a wider area of
the abdominal cavity, including hepatic flexure, splenic flexure and diaphragmatic muscle;
and can also improve the accuracy of peritoneal lavage examinations while avoiding blood
contamination. Laparoscopic surgery is also a very accurate staging procedure, with
potentially reduced complications, bleeding, hospitalization days and expense, and recovery
time compared with laparotomy—thus shortening the interval between surgery and initiation of
postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy.
However, although some studies have compared laparoscopy and laparotomy for ovarian cancer,
most are individual or small-sample case report or case-control studies. A prospective
randomized controlled clinical trial is needed.
This will be a prospective, open, parallel, randomized, controlled clinical trial, designed
to compare the advantages and disadvantages of laparoscopy and laparotomy in diagnosing and
treating early malignant ovarian cancer in terms of surgical safety, postoperative survival
rate, reoperation rate, postoperative quality of life and medical cost, to provide evidence
for clinical application of laparoscopic surgical staging in in diagnosing and treating
early malignant ovarian cancer, and to fill some gaps in the evidence for laparoscopy versus
laparotomy. Endoscopic surgical staging of early malignant ovarian cancer accords with the
trend of minimal invasion and radical treatment for tumors.
Surgical procedures Laparoscopy: (1) Pneumoperitoneum will be established for laparoscopy.
Ascites or pelvic peritoneal lavage fluid will be used for cytologic examination. (2)
Unilateral or bilateral attachments will be resected, placed in specimen bags, and removed,
to be pathologically examined as fast-frozen samples. Alternatively, the ovarian artery and
vein will be ligated, and attachments on the lesion side will be resected and placed in the
specimen bag, which will be tied and placed at right iliac fossa. (3) The uterus will be
resected and removed through the vagina with the specimen bag at the right iliac fossa. (4)
Pelvic and para-aortic lymph nodes will be resected and separately removed through the
vagina. (5) The greater omentum below the transverse colon will be resected and, together
with parietal peritoneum at the paracolic sulci and basin side, receive multiple punch
biopsies. (6) Removal of vermiform appendix; closure of vaginal stump by vaginal suture and
laparoscopic suspension; (7) wound hemostasis, irrigation, and drainage.
Laparotomy: Hysterectomy + oophorotomy + high ligation of ovarian artery and vein +
dissection of pelvic and abdominal aortic lymph nodes + resection of greater omentum +
resection of vermiform appendix. Procedures are the same as with the laparoscopy group.
Withdrawal process Criteria for withdrawal during the trial Patients may withdraw from the
trial (1) if the researchers consider withdrawal to be medically necessary, (2) if patients
ask to withdraw, or (3) if patients who have no fixed means of contact plan to move to other
cities during follow-up.
Withdrawal of consent during follow-up If patients or their families do not agree to do
further tests during follow-up, we will not conduct further evaluation. The corresponding
data will not be collected, although data previously collected will be retained, and can be
used for analysis with informed consent.
Data archiving, collection and monitoring Paper-based case report forms will be archived,
and their data will be converted to an electronic version by professionals using a
double-data entry strategy.
To ensure the safety of the patient and the integrity of the clinical data, correct informed
consent procedures and assessment of primary end points and compliance will be monitored by
professional inspectors. Inspectors have the right to query key documents. Besides site
visits, inspectors and the test center will keep in touch through email and phone.
Security of patients' data Each patient will be encoded separately during the trial. Case
report forms will be saved in accordance with local data protection laws. These data will be
strictly confidential. During clinical interviews, clinical research associates will examine
patient-related data to ensure its correctness and completeness, and its preservation in
accord with legal requirements.
Statistical analysis Statistical analysis will be performed using Statistical Product and
Service Solutions(SPSS) 18.0 software, with normally distributed variables expressed as mean
± standard deviation; abnormally distributed variables as median and interquartile range;
and categorical variables expressed as number and percentage. Continuous variables will be
compared among groups using Student's t-test. Abnormally distributed data will be compared
among groups using non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test. Categorical variables will be
compared among groups using Chi-square test or Fisher's exact test. Repeated measure
analysis of variance (ANOVA) will be performed for the different time point assessments
between groups. P < 0.05 will be considered significant.
Contact and communication Our communication strategy mainly involves patients enrolled in
trials, who can consult with doctors, family members or friends to decide whether to
participate in the trial.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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