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Tonsil Surgery in Recurrent or Chronic Tonsillitis

O

Oulu University Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Tonsillitis Chronic
Tonsillitis Recurrent

Treatments

Procedure: Tonsillotomy
Procedure: Tonsillectomy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04657549
Diary number 113/2020

Details and patient eligibility

About

Tonsil surgery is common in adults with recurrent or chronic tonsillitis. The surgical techniques include either partial or total surgical removal of the palatal tonsils (tonsillotomy, TT, and tonsillectomy, TE, respectively). The aim of this study is to find out, whether tonsil surgery improves the quality of life in these patients and whether the lighter TT is as effective as TE. Our main outcome is the disease-specific Tonsillectomy Outcome Inventory-14 (TOI-14) quality of life questionnaire score at 6 months follow-up.

Full description

Rationale

Surgical removal of palatal tonsils is among the most common ear, nose and throat operations in adults in Finland. The vast majority of these operations are done for recurrent and chronic tonsillitis. Internationally accepted guidelines for the treatment of these diseases are lacking and the indications for tonsil surgery are practice-based rather than evidence-based. The choice of the surgical technique further confuses the picture. The traditional surgical technique has been the total removal of tonsils (tonsillectomy, TE). The relatively recent introduction of partial resection of tonsils, namely tonsillotomy (TT), is suggested to have the benefits of less postoperative pain and smaller risk of post-operative hemorrhage as compared to TE. The relative efficacy of these two techniques to alleviate infective tonsillar diseases is still unclear.

Objectives

The main aim of this study is to obtain reliable evidence on, whether tonsil surgery improves the quality of life in adult patients suffering from recurrent or chronic tonsillitis, and whether the lighter TT would be as effective as TE. We will also compare the scores of a generic quality of life questionnaire as well as several other subjective and objective beneficial and harmful outcomes between the groups.

Methods

In this pragmatic multi-center randomized controlled trial, adult patients suffering from recurrent or chronic tonsillitis will be randomly allocated to three groups: tonsillotomy group (TT), tonsillectomy group (TE) and control group with watchful waiting (WW) in ratio 2:2:1. The patients in the surgical groups are blinded to the operation type (TT or TE). Our hypothesis is that both surgical treatments are more effective than watchful waiting in enhancing quality of life without significant risks (superiority assumption) and that TT is non-inferior to TE when the surgical groups are compared (non-inferiority assumption). Our principal outcome is disease-specific quality of life questionnaire score (Tonsillectomy Outcome Inventory (TOI)-14) at 6 months follow-up. We have validated this questionnaire in Finnish and explored the interpretation of the scores. Secondary outcomes have been listed in the Outcomes section.

Separate random allocation lists for the main research center (Oulu University Hospital) and for the four other centers collectively as well as for recurrent and for chronic tonsillitis will be used. Random permuted blocks is used with block size varying between 5 and 10. Based on our earlier study, the principal outcome, TOI-14 score, will most probably be left-truncated at zero and right-skewed. Therefore, both tobit-analysis and covariate analysis is used with log (1+y) transformation. The primary analysis has two phases. Firstly, the TOI-14 score in the combined surgical group (TT+TE) is compared to that in the WW group. Secondly, the score in the TT group is compared to that in the TE group. Effects will be estimated by adjusted mean differences in the log-transformed scores with 95% confidence intervals. Based on our earlier observational studies on the subject, the following covariates are included in the multivariable adjusted model: gender and baseline TOI-14 score together with stratification factors: enrolling center (Oulu vs. others) and main complaint (recurrent vs. chronic tonsillitis). In case there is missing data on the primary outcome, a multiple imputation method will be used. The analyses will be performed on an intention to treat basis. Per protocol analysis will be performed as sensitivity analysis and results from comparisons on secondary outcomes and subgroup analysis (main complaint) are used to generate hypothesis for future trials.

Enrollment

147 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

The inclusion criteria are:

  • Recurrent tonsillitis episodes:

    • At least 4 episodes in the previous 12 months or at least 3 episodes in 6 months
    • Episodes are disabling, prevent normal functioning and are severe enough for the patient to seek medical attention
    • Episodes are thought to involve the palatine tonsils based on signs found during the episodes (e.g. edema, erythema, exudative tonsillitis, anterior cervical lymphadenitis)
    • No throat cultures or antigen/molecular tests to show infection with group A streptococcus are needed
  • Chronic tonsillitis:

    • Recurrent or chronic throat pain for at least 6 months
    • At least one symptom or sign that indicate that symptoms originate from the palatal tonsils (disturbing tonsil stones, halitosis, anterior cervical lymphadenitis, tonsillar exudates, abnormal tonsillar crypts)
    • Symptomatic treatment has not been effective

The exclusion criteria are:

  • Age less than 18 years
  • Pregnancy
  • History of peritonsillar abscess
  • Previous illness that make prompt same-day surgery unfeasible
  • No electronic identity verification tools

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

147 participants in 3 patient groups

Tonsillectomy
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients will undergo tonsillectomy under general anesthesia within three weeks after enrollment.
Treatment:
Procedure: Tonsillectomy
Tonsillotomy
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients will undergo tonsillotomy under general anesthesia within three weeks after enrollment.
Treatment:
Procedure: Tonsillotomy
Watchful waiting
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients will be closely monitored for the 5-6 months monitoring period.

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

7

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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