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Mesentery Guide Identify Microscopic Clean Resection and Reduces Crohn's Endoscopic Recurrence

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Sun Yat-sen University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Recurrence
Crohn Disease

Treatments

Procedure: mesentery-guided division

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06550843
Sixth Affiliated Hospital 001

Details and patient eligibility

About

Microscopic clean margin is associated with reduced endoscopic recurrence after bowel resection for ileocolic Crohn's disease (CD). We aimed to investigate whether the extent of creeping fat could help indicate microscopic inflammation beyond naked eye assessment of the bowel wall and reduce endoscopic recurrence after ileocolic resection.

Full description

Despite proactive prophylactic treatment administered after surgery for Crohn's disease (CD) patients, early postoperative endoscopic recurrence (EPER) still occurs in 50-80% of patients within six months, increasing the risk of long-term clinical and surgical recurrence. Risk factors for EPER have already been identified, including active smoking, disease behavior, younger age, concomitant perianal disease, prior intestinal resections, and microscopic resection margin positivity. Recently, the influence of microscopic inflammation at the resection margin on EPER has been highlighted by various studies and meta-analysis.

From a surgical perspective, it has become common practice to conservatively resect 2cm width from the gross lesion to lower re-operation risks, while the optimal strategy to attain the microscopic clean margin and minimize EPER remain unclear, considering the limited accuracy of frozen-section examinations. More importantly, the diseased mucosa proximal to the ileal lesion can be healed by preoperative optimization, potentially concealing deeper lesions at the muscularis propria and serosal levels from visual assessment during surgery. Therefore, identifying a macroscopic marker that highly correlates with microscopic inflammation is essential to help locate the clean division.

As a hallmark of CD, the hyperplasia of mesenteric adipose tissue (MAT) or "Creeping fat," was found directly triggered by transmural inflammation and bacterial translocation from CD affected lumen11. Correspondingly, creeping fat has been found to correlate with macroscopic mucosal abnormalities observed after opening the bowel12. However, its relationship with microscopic inflammation, as well as its potential role in determining the division position to achieve better EPER outcomes, remains to be clarified.

Enrollment

150 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Localized ileocolic CD

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with a stoma,residuallesion ,history of bowel resection,or post-operative abdominalinfection were excluded

Trial design

150 participants in 2 patient groups

conventional group
Description:
In the conventional group, the cutting line was approximately 2cm proximal to the macroscopic lesion where the mucosa and intestinal wall appeared macroscopically normal, regardless of the adjacent mesentery.
mesentery-guided group (Mes-G)
Description:
In the Mes-G group, all surgeries were performed by one surgeon team (J.K.) from January 2013 using the following strategy for the proximal division site: the diseased bowel and para-intestinal mesentery were carefully compared by palpation and translucent observation through a shadowless lamp. The comparison was conducted from the diseased bowel towards the normal-appearing region upstream, to identify a point where the hypertrophied mesentery transitioned into normal thickness and softness and became translucent as observed through the shadowless lamp.
Treatment:
Procedure: mesentery-guided division

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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