Elective Endoscopic Gallbladder Treatment: Pilot Study

NCT ID: NCT05723224

Last Updated: 2023-02-10

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

20 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-06-14

Study Completion Date

2023-12-24

Brief Summary

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Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) represents the gold standard for treatment of elective and acute of gallbladder diseases, such as acute cholecystitis (AC). However, in elderly patients or in those with severe comorbidities, urgent LC can be associated with increase morbidity (up to 41%) and mortality (up to 19%). In these patients, placement of a percutaneous gallbladder drainage catheter (PT-GBD) or colecistostomy can be utilized to drain the gallbladder until infection is resolved, as a bridge to subsequent surgery or as definitive treatment. PT-GBD, however, is associated with major adverse events (AEs): intra-hepatic hemorrhage, pneumothorax, biliary peritonitis, bile leak from the site of drainage, AC recurrency, self-removal of the drainage by the patient e/o for spontaneous migration. Recently, to overcome PT-GBD limitations, EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) has been introduced as an alternative minimally invasive therapeutic intervention for treatment of patients with high surgical risk who present with AC. The procedure has high technical and clinical success rates and favorable safety profile, with low risk of recurrent AC.

EUS-GBD, followed, when needed, by intra-cholecystic endoscopic interventions has been utilized even in relatively young patients as recently reported with successful intra-cholecystic giant stones clearance through the LAMS using previously described endoscopic lithotripsy in patients who rejected surgery and desired gallbladder preservation.

A second category of patients who might benefit from EEGBT are elderly individuals with major comorbidities posing them at high surgical risk, who suffer from previous episodes of cholecystitis, recurrent colic episodes due to gallbladder stones, or with biliary acute pancreatitis due to stones migration. Based on all the above considerations, we have designed a prospective, pilot study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of elective EEGBT performed using LAMS stent with electrocautery-enhanced delivery system, followed by intra-cholecystic endoscopic interventions when needed in elderly patients with benign gallbladder diseases at high surgical risk, in whom an indication to perform cholecystectomy was indicated.

Detailed Description

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Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) represents the gold standard for treatment of elective and acute of gallbladder diseases, such as acute cholecystitis (AC). However, in elderly patients or in those with severe comorbidities, urgent LC can be associated with increase morbidity (up to 41%) and mortality (up to 19%). In these patients, placement of a percutaneous gallbladder drainage catheter (PT-GBD) or colecistostomy can be utilized to drain the gallbladder until infection is resolved, as a bridge to subsequent surgery or as definitive treatment.4 PT-GBD, however, is associated with major adverse events (AEs), such as intra-hepatic hemorrhage, pneumothorax, biliary peritonitis and pneumonia that occur in about 6.2% of patients. Moreover, PT-GBD has several disadvantages including risk of bile leak from the site of drainage, AC recurrency, self-removal of the drainage by the patient e/o for spontaneous migration (0-25%), with the need for a repeat procedure to reposition the drainage catheter. Finally, percutaneous drainage causes discomfort for the patient, it is often associated with localized pain at the placement site, and can be felt as a cosmetic disfigurement. Recently, to overcome PT-GBD limitations, EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) has been introduced as an alternative minimally invasive therapeutic intervention for treatment of patients with high surgical risk who present with AC. This procedure has been strongly facilitated by the introduction of lumen-apposing metal stents (LAMSs), allowing adherence of the mobile gallbladder with the gastric/duodenal lumen and formation of a permanent fistulous tract through which therapeutic maneuvers are feasible, rendered EUS-GBD highly safe. The procedure has high technical and clinical success rates and favorable safety profile, with low risk of recurrent AC. Several retrospective studies and meta-analyses favored EUS-GBD over PTGBD. However, recently updated Tokyo guidelines still prefer PT-GBD as a primary treatment for high surgical risk AC patients, leaving EUS-GBD as a valid option only for experienced endosonographers working in high volume centers.

approach has been utilized even in relatively EUS-GBD, followed, when needed, by intra-cholecystic endoscopic interventions has been utilized even in young patients as recently reported in a very provocative case series,that demonstrated successful intra-cholecystic giant stones clearance through the LAMS using previously described endoscopic laser lithotripsy in five patients with a mean age of 50 years, who rejected surgery and desired gallbladder preservation. After removal of LAMS, the fistula was closed with clips or spontaneously, with no gallstone recurrence in any patient after a mean 8-month follow-up. A second category of patients who might benefit from EEGBT are elderly individuals with cardiac, respiratory and other major comorbidities posing them at high surgical risk, who suffer from previous episodes of cholecystitis, recurrent colic episodes due to gallbladder stones, or with biliary acute pancreatitis due to stones migration. Based on all the above considerations, we have designed a prospective, pilot study to evaluate the safety (i.e., adverse events rate) and efficacy (i.e., clinical success rate) of elective EEGBT performed using LAMS stent with electrocautery-enhanced delivery system, followed by intra-cholecystic endoscopic interventions when needed in elderly patients with benign gallbladder diseases at high surgical risk, in whom an indication to perform cholecystectomy was indicated.

Conditions

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Cholecystolithiasis Cholecystitis, Chronic

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder treatment

Endoscoipc gallbladder drainage under EUS guide using lumen apposing metal stents (LAMS) followed when needed by endoscopic lithotripsy.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

elective endoscopic gallbladder treatment

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Access to the gallbladder will be performed from the stomach or duodenum using LAMS with electrocautery-enhanced delivery system such as Hot Axios, Boston Scientifics device or Hot Spaxus, Taewoong at the discretion of the endoscopist. A stent of 10 mm in diameter will be used if the largest gallstone will be smaller than 10 mm in size while greater diameter (≥15 mm stent) will be used if the largest gallstone will be larger than 10mm. Colecystoscopy lithotripsy will be performed, when needed, using mechanical lithotripsy and/or laser lithotripsy at the discretion of the endoscopist. First cholecystoscopy will be done 2 weeks after the index procedure

Interventions

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elective endoscopic gallbladder treatment

Access to the gallbladder will be performed from the stomach or duodenum using LAMS with electrocautery-enhanced delivery system such as Hot Axios, Boston Scientifics device or Hot Spaxus, Taewoong at the discretion of the endoscopist. A stent of 10 mm in diameter will be used if the largest gallstone will be smaller than 10 mm in size while greater diameter (≥15 mm stent) will be used if the largest gallstone will be larger than 10mm. Colecystoscopy lithotripsy will be performed, when needed, using mechanical lithotripsy and/or laser lithotripsy at the discretion of the endoscopist. First cholecystoscopy will be done 2 weeks after the index procedure

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Age ≥75 years
* Benign gallbladder diseases with an indication to perform cholecystectomy
* high surgical risk (ASA score ≥3)
* Signed written informed consent

Exclusion Criteria

* Patients unwilling to undergo follow-up assessments
* Age \<75 years
* Low surgical risk (ASA score \<3)
* Patients with suspected gangrene or perforation of the gallbladder
* Ongoing acute cholecystitis
* Altered anatomy of the upper gastrointestinal tract due to surgery of the esophagus, stomach and/or duodenum
* Abnormal coagulation (INR \> 1.5 and/or platelets \< 50.000/mm3)
* Contraindication to perform endoscopy
* Inability to give informed consent
Minimum Eligible Age

75 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Alberto Larghi

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS

Locations

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Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli

Rome, , Italy

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Italy

Central Contacts

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Alberto Larghi

Role: CONTACT

+390630156580

Facility Contacts

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Alberto Larghi

Role: primary

+390630156580

Other Identifiers

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4569

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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