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Clinical Trial Summary

To evaluate whether intraoperative pleural lavage with providone-iodine following complete resection and pleural reductive surgery for stage IVA thymoma reduces recurrent rates compared to surgery without providone-iodine lavage


Clinical Trial Description

Following the surgical portion of the procedure, assuming frozen section confirms the suspected diagnosis, pleural lavage using 10% povidone-iodine (warmed to normothermic 37°C) will begin. The 10% povidone-iodine is mixed with sterile water with a dilution of 1/10. A total of 6-14 liters of solution will be prepared in advance of the procedure, pending the size of the patient's chest cavity. The warmed PVP-I will be instilled into the chest cavity to a volume that fills involved thoracic cavity or cavities. Once filled, the solution will be allowed to dwell for 15 minutes. At the conclusion of the 15 minutes, the PVP-I solution will be suctioned out of the chest. This process will be repeated for a total of three dwell sessions. At the conclusion of the PVP-I lavage, chest tubes should be placed in the chest cavity to re-expand the lung adequately. Chest tube management will be at the discretion of the individual thoracic surgeons, including suction vs water seal and plan for removal. An honest attempt to maintain the management according to the study protocol will be made. However, if it deemed inappropriate for that patient due to clinical signs, symptoms, or anticipated problems, the surgical team can make whatever changes are deemed necessary. The reason for the deviation must be documented. This patient's data will continue to be collected and analyzed on an intent-to-treat basis for the primary, secondary and tertiary endpoints. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04371458
Study type Interventional
Source Yale University
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date July 2020
Completion date July 2030

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT00718809 - Saracatinib in Treating Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Thymoma or Thymic Cancer Phase 2