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Currently, there are three main methods for endoscopic esophagojejunostomy: circular, linear, and hand-sewn anastomosis, but no universally accepted optimal approach has been established.
Hand-sewn anastomosis relies on advanced endoscopic suturing skills, making it technically demanding and only performed in a limited number of hospitals.
Linear anastomosis is simple to perform and the most widely used in clinical practice. However, it requires resection of a longer segment of the distal esophagus and may struggle to ensure adequate margins for high-positioned tumors or unclear resection boundaries.
Circular anastomosis is a classic method. Its end-to-side approach preserves more esophageal length, making it suitable for high-positioned tumors without the need to close a common opening. Various techniques (e.g., the reverse-puncture method and the Orvil™ transoral anvil technique) have been reported. However, due to challenges such as purse-string suturing, complex anvil placement, and restricted stapler maneuverability, widespread adoption remains difficult.
Prof. Du Jianjun's team innovatively employed endoscopic purse-string forceps and a multifunctional sealing ring to achieve circular anastomosis, demonstrating preliminary technical advantages. This study further explores its feasibility and short-term outcomes in totally endoscopic total gastrectomy.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Previous upper abdominal surgery (excluding laparoscopic cholecystectomy). History of gastrectomy, endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR), or endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD).
Requirement for concurrent surgery for other diseases. Emergency surgery due to gastric cancer complications (bleeding, obstruction, or perforation).
Planned or prior organ/bone marrow transplantation. Blood transfusion within 2 weeks before surgery, bleeding history, or Grade ≥3 hemorrhage (CTCAE v4.0) within 4 weeks.
Coagulopathy (INR >1.5 without anticoagulants) or use of anticoagulants (warfarin/heparin). Prophylactic low-dose warfarin (≤1 mg/day) or aspirin (≤100 mg/day) is permitted if INR ≤1.5.
Arterial/venous thrombosis within 6 months (e.g., stroke, DVT, pulmonary embolism), excluding catheter-related thrombosis from prior chemotherapy.
Myocardial infarction within 6 months or uncontrolled arrhythmia (QTc ≥450 ms [men]/≥470 ms [women] by Fridericia's formula).
NYHA Class III-IV heart failure or LVEF <50%. Ventilatory dysfunction (FEV1 <50% predicted). Urinary protein ≥++ or 24-hour urine protein >1.0 g. Clinically significant pleural/peritoneal effusion requiring intervention. HIV infection. Active tuberculosis. Non-healing wounds or incomplete fracture healing. Active/suspected autoimmune disease (stable cases without immunosuppressants allowed).
Severe autoimmune diseases (e.g., SLE, IBD), chronic diarrhea disorders, or active HBV/HCV (HBV DNA <500 copies/mL permitted).
Systemic corticosteroids (>10 mg/day prednisone equivalent) within 14 days (topical/inhaled steroids or physiologic replacement doses allowed).
Active infection requiring systemic antibiotics within 14 days (prophylactic antibiotics permitted).
Live vaccines within 28 days (inactivated flu vaccines allowed). Concurrent participation in another surgical trial. Alcohol/drug abuse history (abstinent patients eligible). Non-compliance or incomplete data affecting safety/efficacy assessments. Pregnancy/lactation. Other conditions deemed high-risk by investigators. Investigator-determined ineligibility.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Yawei Qian, Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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