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Outcome Study of Endoscopically Inserted Gastrostomy (PEG)Versus Radiologically-guided Insertion of Gastrostomy (RIG)in Children

Not Applicable
Conditions
Two Interventions (PEG and RIG) Compared Against Each Other
Interventions
Procedure: Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy
Procedure: Radiologically-guided insertion of Gastrostomy
Registration Number
NCT01920438
Lead Sponsor
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust
Brief Summary

A gastrostomy is a feeding tube that communicates from the skin directly into the stomach. It is a device frequently used in children that have feeding difficulties or are unable to maintain normal growth via oral feeds. The same device may be inserted in two ways: the percutaneous endoscopic method (PEG) which is guided by the use of an endoscope (flexible camera), or the radiologically inserted method (RIG) which is guided by the use of X-ray imaging. Both methods of insertion have been used in children for more than 20 years, but it is not clear which is the best method. Both methods are associated with complications, including injury to other abdominal organs and leakage leading to sepsis. There are no randomised controlled trials comparing the two techniques.

We aim to compare the outcome of both methods of gastrostomy insertion in children, with emphasis on the complication rates. We have devised a complication score with weightage assigned to each complication according to its severity.

A randomised controlled trial will be performed in children requiring a gastrostomy, 100 per group. The primary outcome will be the overall total complication rate.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
200
Inclusion Criteria
  • any child referred for gastrostomy insertion
Exclusion Criteria
  • the child has gastro-esophageal reflux and is being considered for anti-reflux surgery
  • previous gastrostomy or fundoplication
  • previous extensive abdominal surgery
  • the child requires a concomitant major procedure on the gut or other intra- abdominal organs

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
PEGPercutaneous Endoscopic GastrostomyPercutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy
RIGRadiologically-guided insertion of GastrostomyRadiologically-guided Insertion of Gastrostomy
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Complication rate3 years

The primary end point of the study will be the total number of complications (major and minor).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1. major complication rate : complications requiring surgery3 years

Colonic injury or gastro-colic fistula or other visceral injury, peritonitis requiring surgery, intestinal obstruction requiring surgery, major gastrointestinal bleed, other complications requiring surgery

2. minor complication rate : complications not requiring surgery3 years

Infection requiring systemic antibiotics, delay more than 48 hours in establishing feeds, granulation, wound site discharge, tube-related problems (migration, dislodgement, leakage, breakage), other minor

3.complication score3 years

This is a score devised with weighting assigned to each complication depending on the severity of the complication.The score was devised in a consensus meeting attended by experts in the field (paediatric surgeons, interventional radiologists, junior doctors and nurses.

4.technical failure3 yaers

These are the number of PEG or RIG that are unsuccessful and require conversion to open surgical gastrostomy or laparoscopic gastrostomy.

5.difficulty of procedure3 years

Assessed by the operator as : 1) easy, 2) slightly difficult (but does not warrant conversion), 3) difficult (warrants conversion)

6.cost of hospital treatment3 years
7.mortality3 years
8.cause of death3 years

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Great Ormond Street Hospital

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

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