Clinical Trial Comparing ERCP vs ERCP and Transmural Gall Bladder Drainage (PECAS)

February 27, 2024 updated by: Marina de Benito Sanz, Hospital del Río Hortega

Randomized Multicentre Double-blind Clinical Trial Comparing ERCP vs ERCP and Transmural Gall Bladder Drainage in Non-surgical Patients With Symptomatic Choledocholithiasis

Cholelithiasis occurs in 10-20% of the general population. Up to 18% of these subjects will present symptoms. In patients with symptomatic choledocholithiasis who are not candidates for surgery with indication for ERCP, transmural drainage of the gallbladder reduces the risk of recurrence.

The investigators propose a multicentric double-blind randomized trial. Our primary objective is to assess whether ERCP associated with transmural gallbladder drainage is able to reduce biliary disease income compared with ERCP in patients not candidates for surgery with symptomatic choledocholithiasis and cholelithiasis during one year of follow-up. Also the investigators will analyze the proportion of technical success and complications.

The study population includes all patients older than 75 years with symptomatic choledocholithiasis. An estimated 75 subjects per group (ERCP alone and ERCP and transmural drainage) are needed.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

  1. Introduction Cholelithiasis occurs in 10-20% of the general population (1). Up to 18% of these subjects will present symptoms and, of these, 1.5% will present an episode of pancreatitis, cholecystitis or acute cholangitis (2). In this way, the pathology associated with biliary lithiasis is the first digestive cause of hospital admission (3).

    The treatment of the pathology associated with biliary lithiasis therefore deals with two problems, controlling the acute process and preventing new episodes. In general, laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the recommended method to reduce the risk of recurrence.

  2. Hypothesis

    Conceptual hypothesis:

    In patients with symptomatic choledocholithiasis who are not candidates for surgery with indication for ERCP, transmural drainage of the gallbladder reduces the risk of recurrence.

    Operational hypothesis:

    In subjects> 75 years with symptomatic choledocholithiasis, performing an ERCP with sphincterotomy and transmural drainage of the gallbladder vs. ERCP with sphincterotomy reduces the risk of admission due to complications of cholelithiasis during a 1-year follow-up period.

  3. Objectives.

    Primary objective:

    - To assess whether ERCP associated with transmural gallbladder drainage is able to reduce biliary disease income compared with ERCP in patients not candidates for surgery with symptomatic choledocholithiasis and cholelithiasis during one year of follow-up.

    Secondary objectives:

    • Describe the proportion of technical successes and complications associated with transmural biliary drainage, ERCP and those associated with admission.
    • Compare the proportion of income from non-biliary causes in both groups.
    • Compare mortality during admission and during follow-up in both groups.
    • To compare the incidence of biliary and non-biliary admissions during the follow-up year in both groups.
    • Compare the hospital costs of the index income and those generated in the 12 months of follow-up between the patients assigned to the control group and the experimental group.
  4. Design Multicentric double-blind randomized trial
  5. Methods Study population The study population includes all patients older than 75 years with symptomatic choledocholithiasis. This includes the pictures of acute cholangitis, obstructive jaundice or biliary colic secondary to choledocholithiasis. Participation in the study will be offered to all consecutive patients who meet inclusion criteria and do not present exclusion criteria diagnosed in the participating centers once the project is started until the estimated sample size is completed (see below). Given that in these patients the usual clinical practice is the realization of an ERCP, they will be identified from the ERCP requests received in the endoscopy units.

Intervention Patients who meet the inclusion criteria and do not present any exclusion criteria will be invited to participate in the study. Between the formalization of the request and the endoscopic exploration the informed consent will be completed according to the law 41/2002 of autonomy of the patient without that for that reason the relationship with his doctor is altered or there is any prejudice in his treatment.

  1. Endoscopic act

    It will be held at the Rio Hortega University Hospital, the University General Hospital of Alicante or the Ramón y Cajal University Hospital. First, ERCP will be performed. Subsequently, an endoscopic ultrasound will be performed to rule out local causes of exclusion. If there is no contraindication, randomization and placement of transmural vesicular drainage will be carried out if assigned to the intervention group:

    • Control group: An ERCP with biliary sphincterotomy will be performed. The performance of other techniques (balloon extraction, dilation, placement of biliary prosthesis ...) is at the expense of the endoscopist. The procedure will be performed under direct sedation with propofol controlled by the endoscopist team, and with CO2 (carbon dioxide) insufflation.
    • Intervention group: ERCP with biliary sphincterotomy will be performed. The performance of other techniques (balloon extraction, dilation, placement of biliary prosthesis ...) is at the expense of the endoscopist. After this, transmural drainage of the gallbladder will be performed by placing a LAMS (lumen apposing metal stent) Axios (Boston Scientific) usually 15x10 mm or 10x10 mm to allow direct cholecystoscopy with a conventional gastroscope or transnasal gastroscope. The placement of the drainage will be performed in the same endoscopic act, by means of an Olympus® sectorial echoendoscope, assisted with X-rays, which allows puncturing the vesicle from the gastric antrum or the duodenal bulb to generate a cholecysto-gastrostomy or cholecysto-duodenostomy respectively. After the puncture of the vesicle from the most optimal anatomical point, it will be tutored with guidance and a Hot Axios® LAMS will be placed on it to generate the anastomosis between the aforementioned structures. After the placement of the prosthesis, it will be subject to the decision of the endoscopist to perform cholescystoscopy to perform the maneuvers it deems appropriate (extraction of stones, taking biopsies, resection of polyps ...). The performance of both procedures will be performed under direct sedation with propofol controlled by the endoscopist team, and with CO2 insufflation, according to the usual practice of the HURH (Universitary Hospital Río Hortega) Endoscopy Unit.
  2. Hospitalization:

After the procedure, the hospital management is in the hands of its responsible physicians in plant at the requesting center. A report will be delivered that does not show if the patient has had the LAMS implanted or not. Therefore, physicians responsible for plant management will not receive information about the assigned group or whether transmural vesicular drainage has been performed.

C.3) Follow-up:

It will be held in each of the participating centers. It will consist of 4 face-to-face visits (after 1 day, 3 months, 6 months and 12 months after the procedure) and 2 phone calls (7 days after the procedure and 9 months). In the case of institutionalized patients or those with serious mobility problems, in-person visits may be made by telephone in an exceptional manner. The physician responsible for the follow-up will be blinded as to the procedure performed (it will not be specified if transmural drainage was performed in the endoscopic report, nor will images of the drainage be included in the discharge report available in the electronic medical record until after the completion of the study or if complications are suspected). During the follow-up visits, it will be confirmed that the prosthesis remains normalized by abdominal ultrasound.

Sample size Assuming a proportion of readmissions of biliary cause of 25% in the control group and 7% in the experimental group, with an alpha risk of 5% and a power of 80% and using the arc transformation sine given the proportion of the experimental group, an estimated 60 subjects per group are needed. Given the age of the patients to be included and the mortality associated with the underlying disease, a proportion of losses of 20% is estimated, which would require 75 patients per group. The annual number of ERCP performed at the Río Hortega university hospital ranges from 1,000 to 1100. Assuming also a number of examinations to be carried out in the collaborating centers, with the inclusion and exclusion criteria exposed, a recruitment interval of 12-18 months is estimated.

Randomization It will be done once the patient agrees to participate in the work and has verified the absence of exclusion criteria. To avoid imbalances between the groups, it will be stratified by baseline diagnosis (cholangitis vs others), given that the mortality during admission associated with acute cholangitis is significantly greater than in the rest of the included conditions. Within each stratum a pure randomization will be carried out by means of a sequence generated by computer where the probability of belonging to each group will be 0.5. For each stratum, there will be a total of n numbered closed opaque envelopes (where n = total sample size) that will be stored in the endoscopy unit and will be opened consecutively as participants are included.

Adverse effects monitoring The adverse effects identified during the study will be classified according to the classification of ASGE (for adverse endoscopic effects) for those associated with hospitalization. According to the interval from the procedure they will be divided between postprocedure (in the first 7 days from the same) and late (after this time). Its relationship with the procedure will be classified as definitive, probable, possible or improbable.

Data Collect The data collection will be done by the main researcher or collaborating researchers through a data collection notebook (CRD) anonymously and dissociated from the clinical information by means of a patient identification code.

6. Data management Data from the data collection notebooks will be merged by the main researcher or collaborating researchers anonymously, encrypted and decoupled from the clinical information by means of a patient identification code (ID), in a database made through the application RedCap available through the Spanish Association of Gastroenterology and the data will be downloaded in the form of an Excel file (Microsoft Corporation,USA). The responsible researcher will define an ID for each participant. The data entered in the database will be anonymous and the database will be protected with a password to which only the researchers will have access.

The unified file will be kept in the Río Hortega University Hospital and will be maintained until the end of the study. Regarding the application of the Organic Law on Data Protection 15/1999 and Royal Decree 1720/2007 that develops it, it should be noted that the protocol defined in the project oriented to epidemiological analysis, determines that the files will record information completely anonymized.

7. Statistical analysis It will be done through the STATA program (StataCorp, 2013. Stata Statistical Software: Release 13. College Station, StataCorp LP).

Descriptive analysis In the quantitative variables the arithmetic average and the standard deviation will be calculated (the variables that do not follow a normal distribution will be described with median, minimum, maximum and interquartile range), and the categorical ones will be expressed as percentages and their 95% confidence intervals .

Hypothesis contrast The analysis of the primary objective, the hospital admission of biliary cause, will be carried out through the Z test of homogeneity without using the correction of Yates. The confidence interval of the difference between the two groups will also be estimated. An intention-to-treat analysis will be performed, regardless of the endoscopic treatment received after randomization.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Estimated)

150

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Contact

Study Contact Backup

Study Locations

      • Valladolid, Spain, 47012
        • Recruiting
        • Hospital Rio Hortega
        • Contact:
          • Marina De Benito, MD

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

75 years and older (Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Symptomatic choledocholithiasis (choledocholithiasis demonstrated radiologically or highly suspected by clinical data (acute cholangitis or obstructive jaundice), analytical and imaging according to the criteria of high probability of choledocholithiasis established in the clinical guidelines (ASGE Guide).
  • Discarded for surgical treatment due to age, comorbidity or refusal of the patient.
  • Age>75 years

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Charlson comorbidity scale adjusted to age <4.
  • Hepatobiliary surgery or previous superior digestive tract.
  • Ascitis.
  • Inability to tolerate sedation of endoscopy, perforation of the digestive tract or other contraindication to endoscopy.
  • Coagulopathy with INR (international normalized ratio) > 1.5 not correctable or thrombocytopenia <50000 / mm3 not correctable.
  • Other diagnoses at admission (acute cholecystitis, acute pancreatitis, biliopancreatic neoplasia).
  • Hemodynamic instability.
  • Urgent procedure performed after hours
  • No availability of expert material / endoscopist in drainage.
  • Anatomical impossibility of performing biliary drainage (absence of vesicular distension, contact between gallbladder and stomach or duodenum, contact area <10 mm).
  • Baseline ECOG (Easthern Cooperative Oncology Group) > = 4
  • Expectancy of survival <6 months.
  • Refusal to participate.
  • Distance between the gallbladder and upper digestive tract> 1cm, scleroatrophic vesicle, lack of stable acoustic window for drainage
  • ERCP failed (inhability to dain common bile duct)

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Treatment
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
  • Masking: Triple

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: ERCP with sphincterotomy + gall bladder drainage with LAMS
An ERCP with biliary sphincterotomy will be performed. The performance of other techniques (balloon extraction, dilation, placement of biliary prosthesis ...) is at the expense of the endoscopist. After this, transmural drainage of the gallbladder will be performed by placing a LAMS Axios (Boston Scientific) usually 15x10 mm or 10x10 mm to allow direct cholecystoscopy with a conventional gastroscope or transnasal gastroscope. The placement of the drainage will be performed in the same endoscopic act, by means of an Olympus® sectorial echoendoscope, assisted with X-rays, which allows puncturing the vesicle from the gastric antrum or the duodenal bulb to generate a cholecysto-gastrostomy or cholecysto-duodenostomy respectively. After the puncture of the vesicle from the most optimal anatomical point, it will be tutored with guidance and a Hot Axios® PAL will be placed on it to generate the anastomosis between the aforementioned structures.
Placing a PAL Axios (Boston Scientific) usually 15x10 mm or 10x10 mm to allow direct cholecystoscopy with a conventional gastroscope or transnasal gastroscope. The placement of the drainage will be performed in the same endoscopic act, by means of an Olympus® sectorial echoendoscope, assisted with X-rays, which allows puncturing the vesicle from the gastric antrum or the duodenal bulb to generate a cholecysto-gastrostomy or cholecysto-duodenostomy respectively. After the puncture of the vesicle from the most optimal anatomical point, it will be tutored with guidance and a Hot Axios® PAL 15x10 mm or 10x10 mm will be *placed on it to generate the anastomosis between the aforementioned structures.
Active Comparator: ERCP with sphincterotomy
An ERCP with biliary sphincterotomy will be performed. The performance of other techniques (balloon extraction, dilation, placement of biliary prosthesis ...) is at the expense of the endoscopist.
Placing a PAL Axios (Boston Scientific) usually 15x10 mm or 10x10 mm to allow direct cholecystoscopy with a conventional gastroscope or transnasal gastroscope. The placement of the drainage will be performed in the same endoscopic act, by means of an Olympus® sectorial echoendoscope, assisted with X-rays, which allows puncturing the vesicle from the gastric antrum or the duodenal bulb to generate a cholecysto-gastrostomy or cholecysto-duodenostomy respectively. After the puncture of the vesicle from the most optimal anatomical point, it will be tutored with guidance and a Hot Axios® PAL 15x10 mm or 10x10 mm will be *placed on it to generate the anastomosis between the aforementioned structures.

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Number of paticipants readmitted due to biliary pathology
Time Frame: 1 year
Rate of participants readmitted due to biliary pathology (cholecystitis, cholangitis, pancreatitis, hepatic abscess...) in each group
1 year

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Number of participants with technical success
Time Frame: 1 day
Number of participants with correct placement of the stent from the gastric or duodenal lumen to the gallbladder, together with the documentation of bile flow and / or contrast through it.
1 day
Number of dead participants
Time Frame: 1 year
Rate of deaths in each group
1 year
Hospital costs (euros)
Time Frame: 1 year
Hospital costs (euros) during the period of follow up, including the baseline admission
1 year

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Ana Y Carbajo López, MD, Hospital Rio Hortega

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

General Publications

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

August 1, 2019

Primary Completion (Actual)

December 1, 2022

Study Completion (Estimated)

May 1, 2026

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

April 13, 2019

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

April 17, 2019

First Posted (Actual)

April 19, 2019

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Estimated)

February 28, 2024

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 27, 2024

Last Verified

February 1, 2024

More Information

Terms related to this study

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

NO

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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