Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The iGreenGO Study aims to investigate whether the intraoperative application of NIR/ICG technology is associated with a change in the surgical conduct (CSC) during curative-intent gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy in a cohort of Western patients affected by AGC. The preoperative clinical variables potentially associated with CSC will be also investigated
Full description
Near infra-red/ indocyanine green imaging fluorescence (NIR/ICG) technology is showing promising results in several fields of surgical oncology.
The clinical value of NIR/ICG (near infrared range/indocyanine green) technology in surgical treatment of advanced gastric cancer (AGC) is not clearly established and data regarding whether its application is associated with a change of the intraoperative surgical conduct are lacking in literature.
This is the "iGreenGO (indocyanine Green Gastric Observation) Study" protocol: an international, prospective, multicentre, study.
Study population will be a cohort of western patients who will undergo preoperative upper gastrointestinal endoscopy at the most 20 hours before surgery (intraoperative endoscopic injection before starting surgical dissection is also allowed) with submucosal peritumoral ICG injection and curative-intent gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy for locally AGC.
The primary endpoint will be the incidence of "change of the surgical conduct" (CSC) at the moment of intraoperative NIR/ICG technology activation after a D2 lymphadenectomy performed "with the naked eye". Secondary endpoints will be the preoperative clinical variables potentially associated with CSC, the pattern of abdominal fluorescence distribution according to tumor and patient characteristics, the number of additional lymph nodes retrieved using NIR/ICG technology, the incidence of stage migration due to NIR/ICG application, 90-day morbidity and mortality The iGreenGO Study will be the first Western study to investigate the clinical role of NIR/ICG technology for surgical treatment of AGC in a large cohort of western patients. Results from the present study could provide novel information about which help NIR/ICG technology can supply to surgeons during lymphadenectomy for AGC and the patterns of ICG abdominal fluorescence distribution according to tumor and patient characteristics, which are unanswered questions at present time.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
360 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Pietro M Lombardi, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal