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Gallbladder Cryoablation in High-Risk Patients

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University of Arizona

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Cholecystitis
Gallstone
Gall Bladder Pain
Gallbladder Diseases
Gallstone; Cholecystitis
Biliary Dyskinesia
Biliary Colic

Treatments

Device: Gallbladder Cryoablation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04915651
1904567382

Details and patient eligibility

About

Benign gallbladder disease, including acute cholecystitis, chronic cholecystitis, biliary dyskinesia, and biliary colic, is very common, with over 300,000 surgical cholecystectomies performed per year in the US. Unfortunately, complication rates in elderly patients or patients with many comorbidities are high. These patients are often managed with percutaneous tube drainage of the gallbladder (percutaneous cholecystostomy). The recurrence rate of calculous cholecystitis after cholecystostomy tube removal is as high as 35% at 1 year. These patients are thus faced with permanent cholecystostomy tube drainage, high-risk surgery, or cholecystostomy tube removal and risk of repeat cholecystitis. Gallbladder cryoablation is an alternative to surgical cholecystectomy which is performed percutaneously and does not require general anesthesia. Published evidence on the outcomes of gallbladder cryoablation is however limited at this point in time. The purpose of the proposed study is to follow the outcomes of high-risk patients who undergo gallbladder cryoablation.

Full description

The purpose of the proposed research is to evaluate the outcomes of gallbladder cryoablation in high-risk surgical candidates with benign gallbladder disease (acute cholecystitis, chronic cholecystitis, biliary dyskinesia, biliary colic).

Specific Aim:

Aim 1: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of gallbladder cryoablation in high-risk surgical candidates. Patients who undergo gallbladder cryoablation will be followed long-term according to standard of care. This includes scheduled clinic follow up, laboratory analysis, and imaging as needed. We hypothesize that gallbladder cryoablation is a safe and effective treatment for high-risk surgical patients with benign gallbladder disease. Clinically, we hypothesize that patients will be free from any clinical symptoms or signs after gallbladder cryoablation and removal of a cholecystostomy tube. These include, but are not limited to right upper quadrant pain, fever, chills, and jaundice.

Aim 2: To evaluate the imaging changes seen in the gallbladder after cryoablation. Imaging is part of routine follow up after percutaneous ablation and may include CT, MRI, and nuclear medicine studies as needed. We hypothesize that after cryoablation, patients will be functionally acholecystic, which occlusion of the cystic duct and involution and fibrosis of the gallbladder demonstrated by imaging.

Enrollment

20 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • High-risk surgical candidates with benign gallbladder disease who are not eligible for surgical cholecystectomy and are able to consent to study inclusion.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with benign gallbladder disease who are eligible for surgical cholecystectomy or who are unable to provide informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 1 patient group

Gallbladder Cryoablation
Experimental group
Description:
High-risk patients who undergo gallbladder cryoablation
Treatment:
Device: Gallbladder Cryoablation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Hugh McGregor, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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