Venous Insufficiency Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Trial of Radiofrequency Ablation vs Conventional Surgery for Superficial Venous Insufficiency: if You Don't Tell, They Won't Know
The current study was a double blind randomised controlled trial that compared radiofrequency ablation (RFA) versus conventional surgery (CS) in patients who served as their own controls and who had intact great saphenous veins (GSVs).
Individuals with symptomatic varicose veins and bilateral GSV insufficiency confirmed by
duplex ultrasound examination who were candidates for conventional vein stripping were
eligible for inclusion in the study. A total of 18 patients entered the trial. As per
protocol, each patient was treated with RFA in one leg and CS on the contralateral limb.
Randomisation was performed preoperatively using a randomisation table. Patients were not
advised of the treatment allocation in order to ensure that this trial was carried out in a
blinded fashion. All operations were performed under regional anaesthesia by the same
surgical team, skilled in the management of venous disease with extensive expertise in both
techniques. Phlebectomy of varicosities was not concomitantly performed.
The independent observer physician not involved in the original operation, the patient, and
the duplex ultrasonographer were not aware of the treatment performed in each case and the
surgeon was not involved in outcome assessment.
CS. Patients underwent standard procedure of cranial ligation of the GSV and branches of the
sapheno-femoral junction (SFJ) using a groin crease incision and stripping of the GSV from
SFJ to ankle level, using a vein stripper that was brought out through a small incision near
the medial malleolus.
RFA. The procedure was performed under ultrasound guidance. The GSV proximal to the medial
malleolus was cannulated with a 7F sheath using surgical cutdown. The tip of the
radiofrequency catheter was placed at least 2 cm distal to the SFJ or just distal to the
superficial epigastric vein orifice. Patients received tumescent infiltration with cold
normal saline (0.9%) circumferentially around the GSV within its enveloping fascia and along
the entire length of the treated vein. This was to prevent nerve injury and thermal injury
to the skin. Then the catheter was gradually withdrawn according to the device
manufacturer's recommendations. The technique consisted of controlled segmental heating of
the GSV, using a catheter with a 7-cm heating element (Closureâ„¢ system, VNUS Medical
Technologies, Inc., San Jose, California, USA). The temperature was maintained at 120° C per
segment using a standard time. The thermoablation continued until the catheter tip reached
just below the knee. Immediately following treatment with RFA, intraoperative ultrasound
imaging was used to confirm shrinkage of the vein.
For limbs operated with the radiofrequency technique, a groin crease incision was made
similar to the contralateral side, but with no manipulation of the SFJ. The incision
proximal to the medial malleolus was used for sheath insertion. To ensure that the
independent observer physician not involved in the original operation, the patient, and the
duplex ultrasonographer were not made aware of the treatment done, both incisions were
performed on both legs.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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