Safety and Efficiency of Laparoscopic Management of Intra-canalicular (Emergent) Testis
- Conditions
- Testes Undescend
- Interventions
- Procedure: laparoscopic orchiopexy for intra-canalicular testis
- Registration Number
- NCT04821167
- Lead Sponsor
- dr. Muhammad Abdelhafez Mahmoud, MD
- Brief Summary
Undescended testes (UDTs) are a relatively common finding in pediatrics with prevalence about 1-2% in newborns. Upon discovering a non-intrascrotal testis, it is important to determine whether the testis is palpable or non-palpable (1). A canalicular or 'emergent' testis may be impalpable initially and may be appear when it is 'milked' out of the inguinal canal (where it is concealed from detection) indicating that 15 to 40% of cryptorchidism are viable peeping/canalicular testis.
The laparoscopic approach for treating canalicular undescended testes offers many advantages over open inguinal orchiopexy. The laparoscopic technique maintains the integrity of the inguinal canal anatomy and eliminating the need to divide the epigastric vessels during dissection. The ability to dissect the testicular vessels at a higher extent would increase the vessel length available to lower the testis without strain.
* This is a prospective study will be conducted at Department of Pediatric Surgery, MCH hospital, Bisha, Saudia Arabia and Pediatric surgery Department , Al-Azhar University hospitals, Cairo, Egypt, from January 2019 to October 2020 to evaluate the safety and efficiency of laparoscopic orchiopexy of intracanalicular testis.
* Patients' age and laterality will be reported. Evaluation will be done for the operative difficulties, intraoperative complications, operative time and early postoperative complications.
Testicular site, size and vascularity will be evaluated by ultrasonography at 6th month post operatively. Also, cosmetic results will be evaluated by obtaining the parent's questioners at post-operative OPD clinic visits.
- Laparoscopic orchiopexy for management of inguinal canalicular undescended testes is a safe, effective, and less invasive, without disturbance of inguinal canal anatomy, with better cosmetic results.
- Detailed Description
Aim of the study:
Herein, the study aims to evaluate the laparoscopic procedure for management of canalicular testis regarding operative safety, efficacy and post-operative outcomes.
Brief review of literature:
* Different management modalities for intra-canalicular (emergent) testes in male children (open surgery, Laparoscopy).
* Advantages of laparoscopic orchiopexy for intra-canalicular (emergent) testes.
Patients and Methods:
This is a prospective study, will be conducted out at pediatric surgery tertiary centers (Maternity \& Children's Hospital in Bisha, KSA and Al-Azhar University hospitals in Cairo, Egypt) on pediatric patients presenting at the pediatric surgery OPD clinic by intra-canalicular (emergent/peeping) testes in the period from January 2019 to October 2020. Enrolled patients will be managed by laparoscopic orchiopexy. All patients enrolled in the study will give a written informed consent. The study will be approved by the Institutional Review Board and ethics committee of the hospitals. The main objective is to assess safety and efficacy of laparoscopic orchiopexy for intra-canalicular (emergent/peeping) testes in male patients.
Institutes of the study:
A multicenter study at Pediatric Surgery Departments, Maternity \& Children's hospital in Bisha, KSA and Al-Azhar University hospitals in Cairo.
Number of cases: Sixty two male children. Time frame: period of 1.10 years.
Ethical Consideration:
The protocol will be discussed and approved for clinical study by the Ethical Research Committee at MCH at Bisha, KSA, and other participating hospitals. The procedures and the aim of the study will be clearly explained to the patient and the family. A written informed consent will be obtained before enrollment of the patients into the study. The family refusal to give consent for laparoscopic management is respected but does not deprive the patient from getting open orchiopexy.
Preoperative preparation:
Proper examination done for patients using flat and frog leg position with gentile squeezing of testis down, proved by preoperative inguinoscrotal ultrasonography.
Follow-up:
Patients will be reviewed at the OPD clinic. Patients who could not attend the clinic will be contacted by phone. Postoperative Doppler ultrasonography will be done to assess testicular size and vascularity. Questionnaire will be obtained from the parents to assess their cosmetic satisfaction.
Statistical analysis:
It will be performed with IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 23.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp. Data will be presented as mean, standard deviation, number \& percentage, using Chi-squared test (X2) for qualitative data. The significance level will be set at P \> 0.05.
- Discussion will focus on laparoscopic management of intra-canalicular (emergent) testes. The results obtained from this study will be compared with each other and with that reported in the literature. The discussion will focus on operative details, operative time, results, \& complications.
It will compare results of this study with the results of others. Discussion will determine the most accurate management modality for intra-canalicular (emergent) testes in male children which offers the best outcome and least morbidity.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- Male
- Target Recruitment
- 62
- All children diagnosed as intra-canalicular (emergent/ peeping) testes
- Patients above 14 years of age,
- with retractile testes,
- with retractile testes that were distal to the external ring and
- with nonpalpable testes
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Laparoscopic orchiopexy for intra-canalicular (emergent or peeping) testis laparoscopic orchiopexy for intra-canalicular testis This is a prospective study conducted on male children with intermittent palpable (peeping) UDT to evaluate the safety and efficiency of laparoscopic orchiopexy of intra-canalicular (emergent or peeping) testis.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Side of affected testis (number of cases) 2 years The side of the affected testis
Patients' age (in months) 2 years Patients' age
Patients' weight (in kilograms) 2 years Patients' weight
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Operative time (in minutes) 1 day (day of surgery) Operative time
Testicular site (in centimeters) 2 years Testicular distance from the mid-scrotum point to evaluate that it remained in the scrotum or re-ascended
Testicular size (in cubic milliliters) 2 years Testicular size measurement by ultrasonography
Parents' satisfaction (percent of each satisfaction grade) 2 years Parents' satisfaction questionnaire
Period of follow-up (in months) 2 years Follow-up period
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Mohammad Alsayed Daboos
🇪🇬Cairo, Egypt