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Renal Hypothermia During Partial Nephrectomy

O

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Renal Impairment
Kidney Diseases
Kidney Cancer
Hypothermia
Cancer
Urologic Diseases

Treatments

Procedure: Renal hypothermia

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01529658
2010-767 CIHR MOP 269009;

Details and patient eligibility

About

The Objective is to determine if renal hypothermia during open partial nephrectomy results in improved post-operative renal function compared to warm ischemia.

Primary Aim is to determine the effect of hypothermia on preservation of overall renal function compared to no hypothermia in patients who require hilar vessel clamping during open partial nephrectomy for a renal tumor.

Hypothesis: Hypothermia will result in improved post-operative preservation of overall renal function.

Secondary Aim is to determine the effect of hypothermia on preservation of affected renal function (kidney with the tumor) compared to no hypothermia in patients who require hilar vessel clamping during open partial nephrectomy for a renal tumor.

Hypothesis: Hypothermia will result in improved post-operative preservation of affected renal function.

Full description

The incidence of renal cell carcinoma is increasing and in 2008 it is estimated that over 51,000 new renal cancers will be diagnosed in the United States. To preserve renal function, urologists commonly remove the diseased segment of the kidney (partial nephrectomy) instead of removing the entire kidney (radical nephrectomy). While the benefit of preserving function in patients with renal cell carcinoma has become clear, optimal preservation techniques are yet to be determined. Specifically, the role of hypothermia during partial nephrectomy has been inadequately studied despite theoretical benefit. The investigators objective is to assess the effectiveness of renal hypothermia during partial nephrectomy. The investigators hypothesis is that renal hypothermia during partial nephrectomy results in improved post-operative renal function compared to warm ischemia.

Methods: To test the investigators hypothesis, 180 partial nephrectomy patients will be randomized to cold or warm ischemia. Global and side-specific renal function will be assessed pre-operatively and 12 months post-operatively using radionucleotide clearance and renal scintigraphy.

Significance: To the investigators knowledge, this study will be the first prospective trial to evaluate the clinical impact of renal hypothermia during partial nephrectomy. Since renal function preservation is the primary purpose of partial nephrectomy, these findings will have an important impact on surgical technique and patient outcome.

Enrollment

184 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients presenting with a renal mass deemed amenable to an open partial nephrectomy regardless of stage, histology, presence of solitary kidney, multiple tumors or renal function. Participating surgeons will identify patients they consider to be appropriate candidates for partial nephrectomy with or without renal hypothermia.
  • Willing to consent to randomization
  • Willing to comply with study protocol

Exclusion criteria

  • Bilateral renal tumours with planned surgery either partial or radical nephrectomy on the contralateral kidney within the 12 months of the study.
  • Life expectancy < 3 months as deemed by treating physician
  • Age less than 18 years old
  • Pregnancy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

184 participants in 2 patient groups

No hypothermia
No Intervention group
Description:
After clamping of the renal vessels, no ice slush will be used.
Hypothermia
Experimental group
Description:
saline ice slush around kidney for 10 minutes.
Treatment:
Procedure: Renal hypothermia

Trial contacts and locations

6

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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