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Safety of Regular Diet as the First Meal in Patients Who Underwent Surgical Treatment for Gynecologic Cancer

Phase 3
Withdrawn
Conditions
Gynecologic Neoplasms
Registration Number
NCT00328757
Lead Sponsor
Chiang Mai University
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether it is safe to give a regular diet as the first postoperative meal in patients who underwent surgical treatment for clinically early-stage gynecologic cancer.

Detailed Description

Paralytic ileus, a temporary inhibition of bowel motility, is believed to follow all abdominal surgery. Surgeons have customarily withheld postoperative oral intake until the return of bowel function as evidenced by a presence of bowel sound, a passing of flatus/stool, and a feeling of being hungry. The major concern has been that early oral intake would result in vomiting from severe paralytic ileus with subsequent aspiration pneumonia, wound dehiscence, and anastomotic leakage. Recently, the practice of delayed postoperative oral intake has been challenged by evidence from extensive gastrointestinal physiologic studies that examine contractile activity of the intestine. These data have suggested that the concept of postoperative ileus as paralysis of the entire bowel with complete absence of any functional contractile activity is misleading. If postoperative ileus takes place, it is usually transient and not significant clinically. Several possible clinical benefits of early feeding after surgery exist that include better wound healing, postoperative stress ulcer prevention, reduced sepsis, improved sense of well being, shorter length of hospital stay, and cost saving. Currently, the practice of early administration of liquid diet after surgery has become widely accepted. For early regular diet administration, the proposed additional benefits would be lesser risk of aspiration, faster recovery of intestinal motility, and better nutritional status. Patients who had surgery as a treatment for gynecologic cancer deserve special attention in this regard as they generally have higher risk of developing postoperative ileus due to extensive and/or multiple intraabdominal surgical procedures including radical hysterectomy, pelvic lymph node dissection, and surgical staging procedures. At the same time, this is the group of patients that would benefit most from the aforementioned positive effects of early regular diet feeding.

Comparisons: Regular versus liquid diet as the first postoperative meal on the first day after surgery for clinically early-stage gynecologic cancer.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
240
Inclusion Criteria
  • Clinically early-stage gynecologic cancer patients who underwent standard abdominal surgery as a primary treatment of their diseases
Exclusion Criteria
  • Peritonitis
  • Perioperative hyperalimentation
  • Bowel surgery (except appendectomy)
  • Bowel obstruction
  • History of bowel surgery or inflammatory bowel syndromes
  • History of abdominal/pelvic radiotherapy
  • Need for continued postoperative endotracheal tube or naso/orogastric tube placement
  • Need for postoperative Intensive Care Unit (ICU) administration
  • Pregnancy

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of clinically significant postoperative ileus
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient's satisfaction
Other postoperative complications
Time to first flatus
Amount of meal taken
Hospital stay

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of OB-GYN, Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University

🇹🇭

Muang Chiangmai, Chiang Mai, Thailand

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