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Clinical Trials/NCT02451176
NCT02451176
Completed
Not Applicable

A Prospective Randomized Trial of Biologic Mesh Versus Synthetic Mesh for the Repair of Complex Ventral Hernias

Michael Rosen4 sites in 1 country253 target enrollmentApril 2015
ConditionsVentral Hernia

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Ventral Hernia
Sponsor
Michael Rosen
Enrollment
253
Locations
4
Primary Endpoint
Number of Participants With Absence of Surgical Site Occurrence Requiring Procedural Intervention
Status
Completed
Last Updated
3 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This study will compare the safety, efficacy and cost effectiveness of a permanent synthetic mesh versus a biologic prosthesis for the repair of ventral hernias in the setting of clean-contaminated (Class 2) or contaminated (Class 3) surgical procedures. The findings of this study will have a major impact on the field of hernia surgery as it will provide objective guide to mesh selection, optimize surgical approaches for complex ventral hernia repair, and ultimately significantly improve patient outcomes.

Detailed Description

This is a multicenter prospective double-blinded randomized controlled trial comparing 253 patients with clean-contaminated (Class 2)or contaminated (Class3) abdominal wall ventral hernias undergoing single staged repair. Soft Mesh by CR Bard, a macroporous monofilament polypropylene permanent mesh will be compared to Strattice mesh by Lifecell, a non-cross linked porcine dermal biologic graft for the single stage open reconstruction of clean-contaminated and contaminated abdominal wall defects. The primary outcome variable will be the absence of surgical site occurence requiring procedural intervention and the absence of a hernia recurrence from the time of surgery up to 24 months of postoperative follow up. Patients undergoing open ventral hernia repair for clean-contamination and contaminated abdominal wall hernias meeting inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive a synthetic mesh or a biologic mesh. Randomization will be carried out using computer-generated randomization blocks at the time of enrollment. Stratified randomized will be used with the strata formulated by medical center then by clean-contaminated or contaminated surgical site class. The Investigator will be blinded to patient randomization assignment until the point of intra-operative device use following final CDC wound classification, whereas patients and co-investigators responsible for data analysis will remain blinded to patient randomization until the conclusion of the study period. As such, a double-blinded study protocol will be maintained. Patients randomized to synthetic mesh will receive SoftMesh™ (CR Bard, Murray Hill, NJ) and those patients randomized to biologic mesh will receive Strattice™ (Lifecell, Branchburg NJ). The use of biologic and synthetic mesh in contaminated fields is considered experimental however the selection of these prosthetics was based on a careful review of the multiple animal models, preclinical data, and our own clinical experience with each of these materials placed in both clean and contaminated abdominal wall reconstructions. Surgical wounds will be classified based on CDC(Centers for Disease Control) criteria and only Class 2 and 3 wounds will be included in this study. Postoperatively patients will be evaluated for signs and symptoms of complications along with presence or absence of Surgical Site Infections per CDC guidelines, presence or absence of surgical site occurrences (SSOs) and any procedural interventions required to treat these SSOs, presence or absence of hernia recurrence and any reoperations, length of hospital stay, discharge date, time to return of bowel function and any readmission. Active participation in this study will last for 24 months and will involve one preoperative evaluation visit, one operative procedure visit, and 4 follow up visits. Participants will complete two brief survey questionnaires regarding quality of life, activities and pain. The second outcome will be to demonstrate that a macroporous light-weight polypropylene mesh is more cost effective strategy than a biologic prosthetic in clean-contaminated and contaminated abdominal wall reconstruction

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
April 2015
End Date
April 1, 2021
Last Updated
3 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Michael Rosen
Responsible Party
Sponsor Investigator
Principal Investigator

Michael Rosen

Michael Rosen, MD

The Cleveland Clinic

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • The subject is \> 21 years of age (including women of childbearing age)
  • Scheduled to undergo a planned open single stage reconstruction of a contaminated (CDC wound class2 or 3) abdominal wall defect
  • Ability to undergo general anesthesia
  • Is willing and able to give informed consent
  • Is this a clean-contaminated (Class 2) or contaminated (Class 3) case per CDC Guidelines?
  • Has an estimated parastomal hernia or midline defect size of \>9 cm 2 contaminated (CDC wound class 2 or 3) abdominal wall defect by physical /or radiological exam.
  • Can achieve midline fascial closure?
  • Is subject willing to return for scheduled and required study visits? -

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients have a defect that the surgeon cannot achieve primary fascial apposition and requires a bridge of mesh.
  • Is the patients BMI over 45 kg/m2?
  • Is the patient currently pregnant?
  • Will undergo a laparoscopic or robotic hernia repair.
  • Do they have a class 1 or 4 wound per CDC Guidelines?
  • Are they on immunosuppression including medically-induced with\>10 mg of prednisone/day?
  • Do they have a collagen vascular disorder?
  • Is patient having a prior mesh removed due to a current active mesh infection? (A synthetic mesh that is not incorporated into the tissue, is extracorporeally exposed or has a chronic draining sinus with clear fluid around the material, but not including synthetic mesh incorporated in abdominal wall and not infected)
  • Does the patient have Ascites refractory to medical management?
  • Are they in end stage renal (on hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) or pre-existing liver disease (Hepatitis B or C or Total Bilirubin \>3.0mg/dl)?

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Number of Participants With Absence of Surgical Site Occurrence Requiring Procedural Intervention

Time Frame: 2 years from surgery

Total Number of Participants With Recurrence of Hernias

Time Frame: 2 years post surgery

Secondary Outcomes

  • Direct Costs Associated With the Use of Either Polypropylene or Biologic Mesh(30 days post surgery)

Study Sites (4)

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