Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Incisional hernias occur in nearly 20% of all laparotomy incisions accounting for almost 400,000 ventral hernia repairs annually in the United States. There is an even higher incidence of incisional hernia recurrence after prior repair if the patient is obese. Each subsequent hernia repair leads to increased morbidity and durability. It is not infrequent that many surgeons will advise overweight or obese patients to lose substantial weight prior to complex incisional hernia repair.

However, it is quite difficult for any individual to lose more than 8 pounds a month in a safe, rapid, and sustainable fashion. This is based on losing 2 lbs. per week utilizing diet and exercise alone. Many patients with incisional hernia are physically debilitated that they cannot engage in any substantial physical activity to lose weight. Traditional laparoscopic bariatric surgery (i.e. Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) and SG), while feasible, is a technically challenging endeavor since prior abdominal surgeries increase the amount of intra-abdominal adhesions. Furthermore, there is still a subset of patients who are not candidates for laparoscopic weight loss surgery because of inability to tolerate pneumoperitoneum due to underlying physiologic dysfunction.

- Novel minimally invasive endoscopic technique may help obese patients with an incisional hernia lose weight in a safe and rapid fashion. Early case reports and small case series on gastric bypass revision utilizing such endoscopic technique have shown promise in efficacious weight loss. There have been reports of achieving nearly 20-25% excess weight loss.

Abu Dayyeh and colleagues have also demonstrated that endoscopic gastric plication as a primary weight loss procedure is feasible, but their reported follow-up was only 3 months.8 Brethauer, et al. from Cleveland Clinic performed transoral gastric volume reduction for weight management in 18 patients (TRIM TRIAL). They utilized the Restore Suturing System (Restore device) and reported a mean decrease in BMI of -4.0 ± 3.5 kg/m2. Mean excess weight loss was 27.7% ± 21.9% with no reports of adverse events.9 There have also been reports of not only weight loss but improved insulin sensitivity and secretion.10 Laparoscopic gastric greater curvature plication afforded a mean 50.7% excess weight loss at 12 months.11

The intent of this study is not to demonstrate endoscopic suturing to be a primary option for weight-loss surgery. Preliminary reports have shown such procedure is technically feasible but not durable and the effects of the procedure varied widely among the study participants.12 The investigators view this technology as a bridge for morbidly obese patients, who will need subsequent surgery for another surgical disease, to improve their body habitus and decrease their postoperative morbidity and mortality. The aims of the investigators study are:

- Feasibility of endoscopic gastric sleeve plication

- Define the technical aspects of endoscopic suturing for sleeve plication

- Provide long-term follow-up for both weight loss and resolution of their co-morbidities

- Time from the endoscopic procedure to their incisional hernia repair

- Photographic evidence of the stomach after endoscopic plication during the incisional hernia repair

There are several advantages for the proposed study. First it avoids entering the intra-abdominal cavity. Second, the procedure is performed solely with sutures obviating the need for stapling which may increase the risk of gastric leak from the staple line.13 Lastly, it avoids placing endoscopic intra-luminal devices such as intragastric balloons or duodenal-jejunal sleeves. Limiting factor of such devices is a high rate of premature device withdrawal due to intolerance. Furthermore, their effects are short-lived as most devices will need to be removed by 12 weeks and they only offer a mean 23.6% excess weight loss.13, 14

The implications of this study can be far-reaching. Once efficacy is demonstrated where enough weight loss is achieved that patients can safely and quickly undergo their incisional hernia surgery, the investigators can then conduct a retrospective case-control cross-matched study to further delineate its true benefit. If there is a true benefit, then a randomized control study can be employed in the future.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02078934
Study type Interventional
Source University of California, San Francisco
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date April 2015
Completion date July 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04506996 - Monday-Focused Tailored Rapid Interactive Mobile Messaging for Weight Management 2 N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04420936 - Pragmatic Research in Healthcare Settings to Improve Diabetes and Obesity Prevention and Care for Our Program N/A
Terminated NCT03316105 - Effect of T6 Dermatome Electrical Stimulation on Gastroduodenal Motility in Healthy Volunteers N/A
Completed NCT03700736 - The Healthy Moms Study: Comparison of a Post-Partum Weight Loss Intervention Delivered Via Facebook or In-Person Groups N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04353726 - Knowledge-based Dietary Weight Management. N/A
Completed NCT02948283 - Metformin Hydrochloride and Ritonavir in Treating Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma or Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Phase 1
Completed NCT03377244 - Healthy Body Healthy Souls in the Marshallese Population N/A
Completed NCT02877004 - LLLT for Reducing Waste Circumference and Weight N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04327141 - Low Sugar Protein Pacing, Intermittent Fasting Diet in Men and Women N/A
Completed NCT03929198 - Translation of Pritikin Program to the Community N/A
Recruiting NCT05249465 - Spark: Finding the Optimal Tracking Strategy for Weight Loss in a Digital Health Intervention N/A
Recruiting NCT05942326 - Sleep Goal-focused Online Access to Lifestyle Support N/A
Completed NCT00535600 - Effects of Bariatric Surgery on Insulin
Not yet recruiting NCT03601273 - Bariatric Embolization Trial for the Obese Nonsurgical Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT04357119 - Common Limb Length in One-anastomosis Gastric Bypass N/A
Completed NCT02945410 - Effect of Caloric Restriction and Protein Intake on Metabolism and Anabolic Sensitivity N/A
Completed NCT02948517 - Time Restricted Feeding for Weight Loss and Cardio-protection N/A
Completed NCT03139760 - POWERSforID: A Telehealth Weight Management System for Adults With Intellectual Disability N/A
Completed NCT03210207 - Gastric Plication in Mexican Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT02559479 - A Study to Assess the Effect of a Normal vs. High Protein Diets in Carbohydrates Metabolism in Obese Subjects With Diabetes or Prediabetes N/A