Varicose Veins Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial Investigating The Use Of Pelvic Vein Embolisation To Reduce Recurrent Varicose Veins Of The Legs In Women With Recurrent Varicose Veins And Associated Pelvic Venous Reflux.
The aim of this study is to identify whether the treatment of pelvic venous reflux (pelvic embolisation) in females with recurrent leg varicose veins, who have a proven contribution to their leg varicose veins from pelvic venous reflux, have a reduction in future recurrence after endovenous laser treatment for recurrent varicose veins in the legs.
Varicose veins of the legs effect between 20 and 40% of the adult population in the UK.
Approximately 100,000 operations performed per year for varicose veins, although it is
unknown how many of these are for recurrent varicose veins. Failure to treat varicose veins
results in 10 to 20% of patients deteriorating to skin damage or leg ulceration. Recurrence
rates following surgery vary and have been reported up to 70% at 10 years. Recurrence causes
an increased cost as well as an increase in the patient's healthcare requirements.
The commonest causes of recurrence are reported to be:
- neovascularisation (new vessel growth after treatment)
- missing veins at the initial operation
- perforator vein incompetence
- de novo reflux due to normal deterioration with age
Recent studies have shown that leg varicose veins can be caused by pelvic venous reflux and
that pelvic venous reflux is a cause of recurrent varicose veins. Previous published work
from our own unit has shown that approximately 20% of women who present with varicose veins
of the legs and who have had children previously have pelvic venous reflux on duplex
ultrasound. Such pelvic venous reflux contributes to the venous reflux in the legs, causing
the varicose veins. Furthermore, a recent retrospective study from our own unit has
suggested that failure to treat pelvic venous reflux before treating leg varicose veins is a
major cause of recurrent varicose veins in up to a quarter of women.
However, despite this circumstantial evidence, there is no evidence to prove whether the
treatment of pelvic venous reflux confers any advantage on these patients in terms of
reduction in future recurrence of their varicose veins, following treatment.
The treatment of pelvic venous reflux is currently by coil embolisation of the veins under
x-ray control. This procedure clearly has an additional cost over and above that of treating
the leg varicose veins alone. Therefore it is essential to know whether the treatment of the
pelvic veins in these patients has any effect in reducing future recurrence of leg varicose
veins.
To examine the benefits of coil embolisation, female patients presenting with recurrent leg
varicose veins with a duplex proven contribution from pelvic venous reflux will be
randomised to:
1. transjugular coil embolisation of pelvic veins followed by endovenous treatment of leg
recurrent varicose veins
or
2. endovenous treatment of leg recurrent varicose veins alone
The impact of demographic factors, the severity of patient's symptoms(Aberdeen
questionnaire, CEAP and VCCS scores)and treatment history will be explored, in addition to
the type of treatment received.
Patients will be followed up at six weeks, six months, one year, two years, three years,
four years and five years.
Outcome measures will include quality-of-life scoring (CIVIQ), symptom severity measures
(Aberdeen questionnaire, CEAP and VCCS scores), patient satisfaction with treatment and
clinical examination including clinical photographs and duplex ultrasonography.
The source of any recurrence will be classified through the use of duplex ultrasonography.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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