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Assessment of Autologous Blood Marker Localization in Laparoscopic Colorectal Cancer Surgery

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Colorectal Cancer
Interventions
Procedure: Laparoscopic colorectal cancer resection
Registration Number
NCT05597384
Lead Sponsor
Shanghai East Hospital
Brief Summary

Laparoscopic colorectal surgery has been proved to have similar oncological outcomes with open surgery. Due to the lack of tactile perception, surgeons may have misjudgments in laparoscopic colorectal surgery. Therefore, the accurate localization of a tumor before surgery is important, especially in the early stages of cancer. Recently, some retrospective studies reported the use of patients' autologous blood for preoperative colonic localization in colorectal cancer with successful detection by laparoscopy, but its benefits remain controversial. This study aimed to assess the accuracy and safety of autogenous blood marker localization in laparoscopic radical resection for colorectal cancer.

Detailed Description

Laparoscopic surgery has become the standard for management of colorectal cancer(CRC) with the advantages of less traumatic procedure, but similar oncological outcomes to open surgery. Due to the lack of tactile perception (haptic feedback), surgeons may have misjudgments in patients with small or flat early colon cancer, malignant polyps resected by endoscopic mucosal resection or endoscopic submucosal dissection. Therefore, the accurate localization of a tumor before surgery is important, especially in the early stages of cancer, to clarify the extent of surgical resection.

Several methods are currently being proposed and used to identify the location of tumors. These include endoscopic tattooing with India ink, indocyanine green (ICG), preoperative endoscopic metal clipping with detection using an x-ray or palpation during surgery, and intraoperative endoscopy.

Recently, some retrospective studies reported the use of patients' autologous blood for preoperative colonic localization in CRC with successful detection by laparoscopy. Autologous blood was thought a feasible and safe tattooing agent for preoperative endoscopic localization. Nonetheless, all currently available evidence comes from observational studies that are susceptible to bias. We therefore proposed to conduct this randomized controlled clinical trial to evaluate the accuracy and safety of autogenous blood marker localization in laparoscopic radical resection for colorectal cancer.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
220
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Age from 18 to 80 years
  2. Large lateral spreading tumors that could not be treated endoscopically, serosa-negative malignant colorectal tumors (≤ cT3), and malignant polyps treated endoscopically that required additional colorectal resection.
  3. The tumor is located in the colon, middle and high rectum (the lower margin of the tumor does not exceed peritoneal reflexes)
  4. No distant metastasis.
  5. American Society of Anesthesiology score (ASA) class I-III
  6. Performance status of 0 or 1 on Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group scale (ECOG)
  7. Written informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
  1. BMI > 35kg/m2
  2. Previous history of gastrointestinal surgery that altered the gastrointestinal anatomy.
  3. Pregnant or lactating women
  4. Severe mental disorder
  5. History of previous abdominal surgery (except cholecystectomy and appendectomy) Rejection of laparoscopic resection
  6. History of cerebrovascular accident within the past six months
  7. History of unstable angina or myocardial infarction within the past six months
  8. History of previous neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy
  9. Comorbidity of emergent conditions like obstruction, bleeding or perforation.
  10. Needing simultaneous surgery for other diseases.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Autologous Blood Marker GroupLaparoscopic colorectal cancer resectionThe tattooing was performed at 24-48 hours before the surgery. When the lesion was identified by endoscopy, 2-3 ml of the patient's peripheral venous blood without heparin preparation were injected submucosally at the distal side and proximal side of the lesion using a conventional endoscopic needle without submucosal injection of normal saline.
Intraoperative colonoscopy groupLaparoscopic colorectal cancer resectionUnder general anesthesia with endotracheal intubation, the patient was placed in the modified lithotomy position. After routine laparoscopic exploration, CO2-insufflated intraoperative colonoscopy was performed using a flexible videocolonoscope. Upstream small bowel clamping was applied before intraoperative colonoscopy. During intraoperative colonoscopy, CO2 pneumoperitoneum was maintained by the insufflator so that the laparoscope could guide the colonoscope effectively.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Autogenous blood marker localization was not inferior to intraoperative colonoscopy localizationFrom the beginning of endoscopic tattooing to the end of the surgery.

While checking the intraperitoneal cavity at the start of the surgery, the visibility of tattooing will be first checked. After the complete resection of the colon segment, resected colon specimen will be checked the localization with autologous blood tattooing. The localization accuracy of autologous blood marker will be similar to that of intraoperative colonoscopy localization.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Adverse events related to endoscopic tattooingFrom the beginning of colonoscopic tattooing to 2 weeks after surgery.

The secondary endpoint is the localization safety. Adverse events related to endoscopic tattooing, such as perforation, abscess formation, peritonitis, post-tattoo fever, post-tattoo abdominal pain, and intraperitoneal spillage of tattooing agent, were evaluated in autologous blood group.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Shanghai East Hospital

🇨🇳

Shanghai, Shanghai, China

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