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This is a registry that will maintain prospective data on the clinical outcomes of all patients with pancreatic cyst lesions who undergo EUS-guided alcohol ablation.
Full description
Visit 1 for all participants will consist of going over the Informed Consent form and talking with the patient about the study. If the patient agrees to participate, he/she will be asked to sign the form, and a copy will be given to him/her for his/her records. This will be conducted during the day of the endoscopic procedure before the participant is under anesthesia. The treatment provided will be standard-of-care that is offered to patients with pancreatic cyst lesions (PCL) interested in undergoing EUS-guided ethanol ablation.
An MRI of the abdomen will be obtained as baseline measure to determine the size of the pancreatic cyst and confirm diagnosis.
Prior to undertaking any ablation, the cyst fluid will be sampled at a prior EUS session to check for mucin, viscosity, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) (>200U/L=mucinous cyst), amylase and if required molecular marker analysis. Once a PCL is determined to have a malignant potential the patient will be selected for EUS-guided ablation. All patients will receive a dose of intravenous ciprofloxacin 500mg 30 minutes prior to the ablation. These evaluation and treatment measures are standard-of-care for any patient with pancreatic cyst lesion undergoing EUS-guided ethanol ablation.
Procedural Technique: All procedures will be undertaken using a curvilinear echoendoscope. Once a cyst is identified for ablation it will be punctured using a 22G needle. After subtotal evacuation of the cyst, injection is performed with a volume of alcohol that is equal to the quantity aspirated, and the cyst will be lavaged for 3 to 5 minutes, alternatively filling and emptying the cavity. The injected ethanol will then be evacuated at the end of lavage, leaving just enough fluid to outline the cavity. A second ablative agent such as paclitaxel is then injected and left in the cyst cavity; the volume injected should not exceed the volume of aspirated fluid. The needle tip must be carefully maintained within the cyst to avoid parenchymal injury or cyst wall leak. At the completion of the procedure, the needle will be removed from the cyst cavity. When a cyst is not restored to its original size during ethanol injection, vigorous lavage and aspiration must be avoided because of probable communication with the main pancreatic duct.
In patients with multi-loculated cysts, a single injection may not provide sufficient drug delivery to all locules within a cyst. It is important to determine the optimal angle at which the needle can be introduced into the maximum number of targeted locules. When all punctured locules cannot be visualized on endosonographic image, needle passage across a septation may be indicated. The simultaneous collapse of locules across the septum during cyst fluid evacuation and spread of echogenic bubbles across the septation during injection of ablative agents are indication of good distribution of the ablative agent into the locules. This is important as a missed locule may result in cyst regrowth and treatment failure. While additional needle passes through different angles may increase the effectiveness of cyst ablation it will also increase the incidence of adverse events. Therefore a second needle puncture may be considered only when the risk of adverse events appears low.
The relative effectiveness of the procedure is related to the degree of contact between the ablative agent and the cyst epithelium. However, it is important to maintain the needle in the visual plane and within the cyst cavity during the entire procedure. All techniques described above are standard-of-care treatment measures offered to patients undergoing EUS-guided ethanol ablation of pancreatic cysts.
Ablative agents:
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1,000 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Muhammad Hasan, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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