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Clinical and Economical Evaluation of Colorectal Surgery in Ambulatory Care (Colon-Ambu)

I

IHU Strasbourg

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Colorectal Surgery

Treatments

Other: Clinical and economical evaluation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) significantly decreases mortality, morbidity and hospital length of stay without increasing the rate of re-hospitalization. It reduces psychologic stress caused by surgery and decreases postoperative complications about 50 %, especially in colorectal surgery. ERAS is now the object of several Good Practices Recommendations and is about to become the reference strategy.

The development of ambulatory surgery is a French national concern. Its interest has been demonstrated in many surgical fields. It requires a reflection centered on the patient and a health care pathway organization involving all health care actors.

While hospitalization is still the standard practice for colonic surgery, the objective of this study is to evaluate the medical and economic impact of an ambulatory care for colorectal surgery.

Ambulatory care will be compared to standard hospitalization of patients who benefit from the ERAS program.

Full description

Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) significantly decreases mortality, morbidity and hospital length of stay without increasing the rate of re-hospitalization. It reduces psychologic stress caused by surgery and decreases postoperative complications about 50 %, especially in colorectal surgery. ERAS is now the object of several Good Practices Recommendations and is about to become the reference strategy.

The development of ambulatory surgery is a French national concern. Its interest has been demonstrated in many surgical fields. It requires a reflection centered on the patient and a health care pathway organization involving all health care actors. Multiple interests have been shown:

  • Equivalent mortality and/or morbidity compared with standard hospitalizations
  • Medical and psychological benefits
  • Individualized and less invasive health care pathways, in favor of patient's autonomy
  • Multidisciplinary approach and innovative care
  • Heath care costs management (decrease of hospital length of stay, optimization of operating rooms).

Ambulatory colectomies feasibility is recognized since 2013-2014 in France (Dr. Gignoux, MD in Lyon and Dr. Chasserant, MD in Le Havre). These ambulatory procedures are implemented in few expert centers with significant experience (more than 100 patients in Le Havre and more than 85 patients in Lyon) but several human and organizational limitations slow this innovative care.

The risk of complications does not seem to be increased on condition of anticipate and provide a postoperative follow-up at home.

While hospitalization is still the standard practice for colonic surgery, the objective of this study is to evaluate the medical and economic impact of an ambulatory care for colorectal surgery.

Ambulatory care will be compared to standard hospitalization of patients who benefit from the ERAS program.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male or female over 18 years old
  • Patient able to understand the objectives and risks related to the trial
  • Patient able to give written informed consent
  • Patient able to understand and accept the health care program
  • Isolated colonic lesion located on the colon or the upper rectum
  • Any neoplastic or non-neoplastic colonic pathology
  • Colonic surgery except resection without continuity interruption (e.g. low cecum resection, partial colectomy, suture for polyp)
  • Moderate and/or controlled comorbidities
  • No history of multiple laparotomies
  • No psychosocial distress
  • No living alone patient
  • Patient registered with the French social security

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient in exclusion period of another clinical study
  • Emergency surgical procedure
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Presence of an uncontrolled preoperative anemia
  • Effective anticoagulation treatment, impossible to suspend
  • Kidney failure (treated by dialysis)
  • Hepatic cirrhosis
  • Patient refusal
  • Patient in custody
  • Patient under guardianship
  • Pregnancy
  • Breastfeeding
  • Poor general condition

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

5 participants in 2 patient groups

Ambulatory care
Experimental group
Description:
Colorectal surgery in ambulatory care
Treatment:
Other: Clinical and economical evaluation
Standard hospitalization
Other group
Description:
Colorectal surgery with standard hospitalization for retrospective patients who benefit from the ERAS program, selected by statistical matching.
Treatment:
Other: Clinical and economical evaluation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Didier Mutter, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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