Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The laser tissue welding device is intended for use in patients requiring sealing of the pancreas after partial pancreatectomy, and including those patients who are fully heparinized or have hemodilutional coagulation failure. The hypothesis is that the laser tissue welding device is safe and effective in sealing the pancreas, thereby decreasing the blood loss (operative and post-operative), and pancreatic juice leakage for patients when the Laser Tissue Welding device is used after pancreatic resection.


Clinical Trial Description

UNMET CLINICAL NEED In the United States, pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in both men and women and will be the second leading case by 2030. Pancreatoduodenectomy (Whipple procedure) and distal partial pancreatectomy is used to treat pancreatic tumors, and these procedures are associated with a high rate of morbidity due to pancreatic fistulae. As per the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program: It is estimated that 41,609 men and women (21,370 men and 21,770 women) will be diagnosed with and 38,460 men and women will die of cancer of the pancreas in 2013. The five-year survival is dismal, 24.1% for localized malignancy, and drops to 6% if there is regional spread. There are 45,220 new cases in 2013 and 38,460 deaths. Distal Pancreatectomy may be indicated for malignant exocrine tumors of the body and tail of pancreas (62%), insulinomas, chronic pancreatitis (12%), pancreatic pseudocysts, non pancreatic tumors (23%) and injury due to trauma. Due to heighten awareness and preventative care, there has been an increase in detection of incidental small pancreatic mass cases due to widespread use of abdominal cross sectional imaging and thus an increase in the amount of pancreatic surgery performed. This is the stage when curative resections may be possible. 1. Surgical removal of the tumor is the only chance of a cure at T1A. 2. All pancreatic tumors at any stage require bulk reduction by a surgical procedure. For patients undergoing distal pancreatectomy, pancreatic fistulas occurred post-operatively in 31% of patients. Over the long-term Kazanjian et al analyzed, 182 patients from 1996-2005 who underwent Pancreatoduodenectomy to treat ductal adenocarcinoma, concluded that the principal factor influencing long-term survival was operative blood loss. Pancreatic fistula is a main cause of postoperative morbidity, and is associated with numerous further complications, such as intra-abdominal abscesses, wound infection, sepsis, electrolyte imbalance, malabsorption, and hemorrhage, and with a dramatically increase in healthcare resource utilization. The current state-of-art pancreatic surgical resections have an unacceptable pancreatic leak rate of 30-50%. This is because there are no FDA cleared or approved sealants or devices found to be safe or effective for sealing this organ. The current standard of care is anything but standard because of the use of off-label devices and sealants. - Endo GIA Staplers: 510 (k) k111825 Cleared on basis of "literature review" without animal or human safety or efficacy data. - Gore SeamGuard staple/suture reinforcement material 510 (k) k043056 Synthetic bio absorbable glycolide and trimethylene carbonate copolymer. Cleared on basis of in-vivo studies done "without performance standards" under section 514. - Surgical Sealants: All used "off label": None are FDA cleared or approved for pancreatic surgery. These are Floseal, TachoSil, Tisseel, BioGlue, and CoSeal. Jörg Kleeff et al reviewed the factors for surgical failure of distal pancreatectomy in 302 consecutive patients from 1993 to 2006 using four different surgical closures (gut anastomosis, seromuscular patch, suture and stapling device). Although distal pancreatectomy is less moribund as compared to Whipple procedure, morbidity was 32-52%, pancreatic fistulas occurred in 20-33% and mortality in 2% of cases. Pancreatic fistulas contributed significantly to morbidity, sepsis, length of stay and overall costs. Stapler closure of the pancreatic remnant is associated with a significantly higher fistula rate. Laser Tissue Welding is the first combination (laser and biologic) class III surgical device intended to join and seal tissues accurately and instantly. The treatment process uses thermal energy created when a laser excites photosensitive dye molecules, to coagulate the protein albumin which transforms from a liquid to a solid instantly. Laser tissue welding creates a non-compressive, non-ablative sealing of tissues with microscopic thermal damage. This combination of a laser with albumin biologics stops bleeding and fluid leaks in nanoseconds without using sutures, hemostatic clotting factors (platelets/thrombin/fibrin), thermal or cryoablation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03147768
Study type Interventional
Source Laser Tissue Welding, Inc.
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
Start date January 1, 2018
Completion date December 31, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04085055 - Fine Needle Biopsy of Solid Pancreatic Mass Lesions N/A
Recruiting NCT01950572 - Tissue Procurement and Natural History Study of Patients With Malignant Mesothelioma
Terminated NCT00529113 - Study With Gemcitabine and RTA 402 for Patients With Unresectable Pancreatic Cancer Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05351983 - Patient-derived Organoids Drug Screen in Pancreatic Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT04809935 - EUS-Coeliac Plexus Block Versus Radiofrequency Ablation in Pain Relief of Patients With Malignancy Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05481476 - Surufatinib Combined With Sintilimab and AG in First-line Therapy of Patients With Locally Advanced or Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT04652271 - International Pancreatic Surgery Outcomes Study - PancreasGroup.Org
Active, not recruiting NCT02950064 - A Study to Determine the Safety of BTP-114 for Treatment in Patients With Advanced Solid Tumors With BRCA Mutations Phase 1
Completed NCT03054987 - Endoscopic Ultrasound and Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography for Malignant Distal Biliary Obstruction N/A
Completed NCT02909530 - Comparison Between Olympus EZ Shot 3Plus 19G and EZ Shot 2 19G in EUS-guided FNB of Solid Pancreatic Masses N/A
Completed NCT02374411 - Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practice of Surgeons Toward Nutrition Support in HIPEC Patients N/A
Completed NCT01770405 - Clinical Registry of nCLE in Masses and Cystic Tumors of the Pancreas, Lymph Nodes, Submucosal Lesions of the GI Tract N/A
Terminated NCT01313416 - Gemcitabine and CT-011 for Resected Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Terminated NCT01515046 - Clinical Trial of High-dose Vitamin C for Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Enrolling by invitation NCT01465425 - Extracolonic Findings on Computed Tomography (CT) Colonography
Terminated NCT01434459 - Study of Gemcitabine With TheraSphere® (Yttrium-90)in Patients With Hepatic Tumors of Pancreatobiliary Origin Phase 1
Completed NCT00985777 - Vitamin E δ-Tocotrienol Administered to Subjects With Resectable Pancreatic Exocrine Neoplasia Phase 1
Completed NCT00385177 - Phase 1 Dose Escalation Study of SN2310 Injectable Emulsion in Patients With Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 1
Recruiting NCT00178763 - Hyperthermia With Chemotherapy for Locally Advanced or Metastatic Pancreas Cancer Phase 2
Completed NCT00136669 - Acupuncture For Pancreatic Cancer Pain Phase 3