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Outcome of Resection for Colorectal Cancer

Not Applicable
Conditions
Laparoscopy
Interventions
Procedure: minimally invasive surgery
Registration Number
NCT03837782
Lead Sponsor
Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital
Brief Summary

There are limited data from retrospective studies regarding whether short-term and long-term outcomes after laparoscopic or robot-assisted radical colectomy (minimally invasive surgery) are equivalent to those after open abdominal radical colectomy (open surgery) among patients with early and medium-stage colorectal cancer.

This trial is a multicenter,prospective, randomized trial evaluating short-term and survival outcomes concerning minimally invasive surgery and open surgery for colorectal cancer.

Detailed Description

Radical colectomy and proctectomy with regional lymphadenectomy remain the standard recommendation for patients with early and medium-stage colorectal cancer. Current guidelines from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network indicate that either laparotomy (open surgery) or laparoscopy (minimally invasive surgery performed with either conventional or robotic techniques) is an acceptable approach to radical resection in patients with early- and medium stage (I to III) colorectal cancer. These recommendations have led to widespread use of a minimally invasive approach for radical resection, although there is a paucity of adequately powered, prospective, randomized trials evaluating short term and survival outcomes.

Retrospective studies involving patients with early and medium-stage colorectal cancer have shown that laparoscopic resection is associated with less intraoperative blood loss, a shorter length of hospital stay, and a lower risk of postoperative complications than open abdominal radical resection. Similarly, the minimally invasive approach has not been associated with lower 5-year rates of disease-free survival or overall survival than the open approach. In addition, retrospective studies have shown that recurrence rates and survival rates do not differ significantly between the two approaches.

The investigators hypothesized that minimally invasive surgery was not inferior or superior to open radical resection in terms of short-term and long-term outcome. In the present trial, the Laparoscopic Resection and Laparotomy for Colorectal Cancer (LRLCC) Trial, the investigators tested this hypothesis by prospectively assigning patients to minimally invasive (conventional laparoscopic or robotic) or open abdominal radical surgery and comparing the short-term outcome, the rate of recurrence, and the overall survival rate between the two groups.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1300
Inclusion Criteria

(i) tumor without distant metastasis; (ii) classified as stage I, II or III by TNM staging system; (iii) Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status of 0 or 1; (iv) a minimum of 12 lymph nodes resected to accurately identify stage; (v) solitary malignant lesion after thorough colonoscopy; (vi) complete resection (R0) with no positive nodes left behind; (vii) histological diagnosis of adenocarcinoma.

Exclusion Criteria

(i) <18 years or >90 years; (ii) serious concurrent illness; (iii) clinically suspicious distant metastasis detected by positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT); (iv) familial adenomatous polyposis syndrome (FAP), hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) and other hereditary CRC; (v) postoperative pathological close, indeterminate, or positive margins; (vi) circumferential resection margin < 1mm in rectal cancer; (vii) short anticipated life expectancy due to postoperative comorbidities on account of cardiopulmonary insufficiency.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
minimally invasive surgeryminimally invasive surgeryPatients were randomized to undergo minimally invasive radical resection (endoscopic surgery or robotic assisted surgery). Each participating site required accreditation by the trial management committee to ensure proper surgical technique during minimally invasive surgery. Patients were eligible if they had colorectal adenocarcinoma; had a disease stage of I (T1,T2), IIABC (T3-T4ab) or IIIABC (TanyN1-2) according to the staging system of NCCN; and had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance-status score of 0 or 1 (on a 5-point scale, with higher values indicating greater disability).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
complicationsthrough hospital stay, an average of two weeks

complications includes intraoperative and postoperative complications, such as huge blood loss, anastomotic fistula, abdominal infection and septic shock.

disease free survivalFrom date of randomization until the date of first documented progression, assessed up to 70 months

Disease-free survival (DFS) was defined as the interval between the date of surgical resection and diagnosis of recurrence or the most recent follow-up date.

overall survivalFrom date of randomization until the date of death from any cause, assessed up to 70 months.

Overall survival (OS) was measured from the date of hepatectomy to death with or without HCC recurrence or the end of this study period.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital

🇨🇳

Tianjin, Tianjin, China

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