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Identification of Risk Factors and Construction of Prediction Model for Postoperative Intestinal Anastomotic Leakage in Ovarian Cancer

S

Southeast University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Ovarian Cancer

Treatments

Procedure: Type of bowel resection, surgical complexity score, intraoperative blood loss, perioperative erythrocyte transfusion, type of anastomosis

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06458361
2024040145

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study was a multicenter, retrospective cohort study. Although advancements in surgical techniques have mitigated the incidence of intestinal anastomotic fistula, complete avoidance remains elusive. Anastomotic leakage (AL) complications directly impinge on postoperative quality of life and pose life-threatening risks if inadequately managed. Given AL's adverse prognostic implications and the financial strain on patients' families, identifying its risk factors aids in perioperative risk assessment, enabling timely clinical decisions on interventions to enhance prognosis and curtail adverse outcomes and economic investments.

Full description

Optimal cytoreduction, particularly in advanced cases, significantly extends 5-year survival compared to cases with residual disease exceeding 1 cm. Consequently, ultra-radical tumor cytoreduction procedures, commonly performed in advanced ovarian cancer, entail the excision of abdominopelvic tissues affected by the primary ovarian malignancy, including segments of the bowel, bladder, spleen, gallbladder, diaphragm, and other organs. Rectosigmoid resection (RSR) emerges as the predominant bowel resection, followed by colon and small bowel resections. Intestinal anastomosis post-RSR is indispensable for bowel reconstruction but bears a notable risk of postoperative anastomotic fistula (AL), a major complication. AL incidence rates fluctuate over time, reported between 8-14% in OC surgery patients undergoing RSR.

AL imposes considerable burdens, encompassing elevated hospital costs, prolonged stays, heightened rates of secondary admissions and surgeries, and mortality rates ranging from 3% to 21%. Furthermore, AL delays the commencement of adjuvant chemotherapy, detrimentally impacting overall survival and representing a significant consequence of colorectal surgery.

Enrollment

300 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patients with postoperative pathological diagnosis of primary ovarian, fallopian tube or peritoneal cancer
  2. Patients undergoing tumour cytoreductive surgery combined with colorectal resection and stage I intestinal anastomosis
  3. No history of other malignant tumours
  4. Complete case data

Exclusion criteria

  1. Previous combination of malignant tumours of other organs
  2. Comorbidities with serious diseases related to other organs
  3. Patients undergoing secondary tumour cytoreduction

Trial design

300 participants in 2 patient groups

Anastomotic Leakage
Description:
Anastomotic Leakage in the first month after surgery
Treatment:
Procedure: Type of bowel resection, surgical complexity score, intraoperative blood loss, perioperative erythrocyte transfusion, type of anastomosis
non-anastomotic Leakage
Description:
non-anastomotic Leakage in the first month after surgery
Treatment:
Procedure: Type of bowel resection, surgical complexity score, intraoperative blood loss, perioperative erythrocyte transfusion, type of anastomosis

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yang Shen, M.D; Yang Shen

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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