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A randomized trial to assess the safety and efficacy of CG-100 for reducing stoma creation rate in subjects undergoing mesorectal excision.
Full description
A primary diverting stoma is widely used by surgeons in order to bypass the low rectal anastomosis and reduce morbidity associated with anastomotic leaks. Today a stoma is created for all high-risk patients even though the expected anastomotic leak rate is less than 20%. This means that 80% of patients are exposed to potentially serious complications associated with the stoma itself without any clinical benefit.
CG-100, a removable, temporary intraluminal bypass device, developed by Colospan, is designed to address this need by safely postponing the creation of a protective stoma until 10 days after surgery only for patients who need it (i.e. have a defect in the anastomosis); thereby allowing patients with an intact anastomosis a quicker and safer return to normal activity.
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250 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Shelly Sharon, MSc; Jonathan Elsner, PhD, MBA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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