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UnknownNCT03536247

Papillary Balloon Dilation Versus Intraductal Lithotripsy

Prospective Randomized Trial of Cholangioscopy Guided Intraductal Lithotripsy Versus Papillary Balloon Dilation for the Endoscopic Treatment of Large Bile Duct Stones

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Southern California · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 115 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Our aim is to compare the efficacy, safety, procedural time required, and costs of a strategy initially employing cholangioscopy guided intraductal lithotripsy (laser/electrohydraulic lithtripsy (EHL)) versus a strategy initially using papillary dilation for removal of large bile duct stones.

Detailed description

The study will be a prospective single blind randomized comparative trial. All patients presenting with choledocholithiasis will be considered for the study. If their ultrasound, computed tomography, or magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates a large stone (\>1cm) and they do not fulfill the exclusion criterion they will be eligible for the study. If a prior Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) demonstrates a stone \>1cm, which could not be removed with standard methods, they will also be eligible. Randomization will be stratified based on whether or not the procedure is a first or repeat ERCP Patients will be randomized using a computer generated randomization schedule with concealed allocation in a 1:1 assignment (allocation ratio) to initial cholangioscopy guided lithoripsy versus initial papillary dilation. Randomization will be blocked in groups of 12. In those randomized to cholangioscopy-guided lithotripsy, the procedure will be performed in the standard manner using a single operator cholangioscopy system and a holmium laser or EHL (dependent on availability). Those in the papillary dilation arm will undergo the standard approach using the combined papillary dilation balloon sphincterotomy system. The patients will be blinded as to treatment arm. "Conventional" methods including mechanical lithotripsy or stent placement may be used to remove stones/debris in combination with the specified intervention, as is done for standard clinical care. Use of these strategies will be recorded If stone removal fails with the assigned strategy, this will be considered failure of the assigned intervention. This decision will be made by the attending endoscopist and recorded. The patient will then crossover into the other treatment arm. The primary outcome will be complete stone clearance in the first study procedure by the assigned method. Additional outcomes will be total procedure time, cost of equipment, and number and type of complications. Additional ERCP may be needed for complete removal in some cases (i.e. complete removal in first attempt is not possible), thus we will also compare the number of ERCP needed for final stone clearance and whether stone removal is eventually achieved by endoscopic methods (comparison will be on an intention to treat basis). Additionally, if patients require surgical stone removal for the standard clinical indication in the case that endoscopic strategies are not successful, this will be recorded. The patients will be followed clinically by the principal investigator assisted by a research coordinator on days 1,7 and 30 post procedures. This will be done as a brief follow up visit if the patient is still hospitalized or by telephone call thereafter. Thus, all procedures performed in this study represent standard clinical care, which would be used even if the patients did not take part in the study, except that the initial choice to use cholangioscopy guided lithotripsy versus papillary dilation will be randomized.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREInitial therapy with papillary balloon dilationpatients will first undergo papillary dilation
PROCEDUREInitial therapy with intraductal lithotripsypatients will first undergo intraductal laser or electrohydraulic lithrotripsy

Timeline

Start date
2018-09-07
Primary completion
2024-12-01
Completion
2024-12-01
First posted
2018-05-24
Last updated
2022-06-15

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03536247. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.