Study Comparing Early Laparoscopy With Active Observation in Acute Non-specific Abdominal Pain
NCT ID: NCT01675466
Last Updated: 2013-03-26
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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TERMINATED
PHASE4
17 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2012-08-31
2013-01-31
Brief Summary
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Traditionally such patients are managed with a strategy of active observation. Patients are examined at regular intervals and may undergo imaging. In some cases, symptoms and signs progress and surgery is needed while in other cases resolution may occur or a diagnosis may be reached non-operatively allowing focused medical treatment. Recently, two alternative strategies have emerged. Early cross-sectional imaging using CT scanning may identify conditions whilst being non-invasive. This would allow diagnosis and treatment would follow. The alternative strategy of early laparoscopy (key hole surgery) offers the possibility of concomitant therapy, but is invasive.
The study hypothesis is that in patients with acute non-specific abdominal pain active management with laparoscopy on admission will reduce hospital stay and costs when compared to traditional active observation, without increasing complications.
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Detailed Description
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There is a final subgroup of patients who are the population of interest for this trial. These are patients in whom no clear diagnosis or safe decision to operate or discharge is possible. Such patients are usually admitted for a period of observation with further investigations or interventions ordered as their clinical picture evolves.
These patients will then be randomly assigned to one of two management options: an active observation arm (control) or early laparoscopy arm.
Active Observation: Patients randomised to this group will receive routine practice and will serve as the trial control group. They will be reviewed regularly by the responsible surgical team. Further investigations and interventions will be requested at the discretion of the responsible team.
Early laparoscopy: Patients randomised to this group will be listed for a diagnostic laparoscopy in the emergency theatre . The aim will be to undertake this procedure within 12 hours of randomisation. The procedure will be performed by the duty consultant surgeon or his / her nominated deputy as is usual practice. Findings at laparoscopy which require surgical intervention e.g. appendicitis will be treated as part of the same procedure as is routine clinical practice.
Follow-up: Each patient will be followed-up on a daily basis by a member of the trial team whilst an in-patient. Complications, further investigations and interventions, unplanned critical care admissions, death, length of hospital stay and final discharge diagnosis will all be recorded. Following discharge, each patient will be reviewed at four weeks and six months. SF36 questionnaires will be completed at each of these visits. In addition, the Hospital In-patient Episode database will be interrogated for further admissions to other hospitals within six months of randomisation
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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early laparoscopy
early laparoscopy, aiming to achieve this within 12 hours
early laparoscopy
Laparoscopy under performed by the surgeon on duty or his/her deputy. The aim is to achieve this within 12 hours of randomisation. This will be performed under general anaesthetic and involve the necessary drugs. The procedure will require laparoscopy instruments. There will be a umbilical port which will be 10mm in size and one 5mm port below this. If pathology is found, a further port will be needed to perform treatment.
General anaesthesia
Laparoscopic instruments
active observation
standard management - the "wait and see" approach with serial examinations and investigations as deemed necessary
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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early laparoscopy
Laparoscopy under performed by the surgeon on duty or his/her deputy. The aim is to achieve this within 12 hours of randomisation. This will be performed under general anaesthetic and involve the necessary drugs. The procedure will require laparoscopy instruments. There will be a umbilical port which will be 10mm in size and one 5mm port below this. If pathology is found, a further port will be needed to perform treatment.
General anaesthesia
Laparoscopic instruments
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* admission with abdominal pain for up to one week prior to admission deemed to be non-specific pain by senior surgical team member
* patient willing to give full informed consent for participation
Exclusion Criteria
* pain of greater than 7 days duration
* admission with abdominal pain in previous 6 months
* history of inflammatory bowel disease
* previous history of appendicectomy
* previous surgery rendering laparoscopy unsafe eg. multiple laparotomies
* history of intra-abdominal transplant including retroperitoneal renal allografting
* clinical picture necessitating immediate surgical procedure
* cases involving trauma
* patients who are unable or unwilling to give full informed consent
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Mid Western Regional Hospital, Ireland
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Professor Stewart Walsh
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Donagh A Healy, MB
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Stewart R Walsh, MB MCh
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Locations
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University Hospital Limerick
Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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ABC123
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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