Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT04198259

Interventional Devascularization Plus HVPG-Guided Carvedilol Therapy vs TIPS

Interventional Devascularization Plus HVPG-Guided Carvedilol Therapy vs TIPS for the Prevention of Gastric Variceal Rebleeding in Patients With Liver Cirrhosis: A Prospective, Randomized, Controlled Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
212 (estimated)
Sponsor
Air Force Military Medical University, China · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Gastric varices (GV) are present in around 20% of patients with cirrhosis. Bleeding from GV accounts for 10-20% of all variceal bleeding. For the prevention of gastric variceal bleeding, TIPS or BRTO as firstline treatments were suggested. No randomized trials have compared BRTO with other therapies. BRTO and its variations might increase portal pressure and might worsen complications, such as ascites or bleeding from EV. In this regard, if NSBB is combined with BRTO and its variations (we called interventional devascularization) for those HVPG responders, the drawbacks of interventional devascularization might be overcome. Therefore, the investigators conducted this RCT to compare the effectiveness and safety of TIPS with those of interventional devascularization in the prevention of rebleeding from gastric varices.

Detailed description

Gastric varices (GV) are present in around 20% of patients with cirrhosis. Bleeding from GV accounts for 10-20% of all variceal bleeding. GV are classified according to their location in the stomach and their relationship with esophageal varices (EV). Accordingly, GV are divided into gastroesophageal varices (GOV) and isolated gastric varices (IGV) . The management of type 1 GOV, which extend from the esophagus along the lesser curvature of the stomach, is similar to the management of EV. Historically, bleeding from type 2 GOV (i.e. GOV extending into the fundus), type 1 IGV (i.e. located in the fundus) and type 2 IGV (i.e. located anywhere in the stomach), is considered to be more severe and difficult to treat than EV bleeding. Few studies, mostly retrospective and uncontrolled, have focused on the management of non-GOV1 GV, and the optimal treatment remains controversial. For the prevention of gastric variceal bleeding, treatment principles can be classified into two categories: decreasing portal pressure and obstructing GEV. Methods for decreasing portal pressure include medications (NSBB), radiological intervention (TIPS) and surgery. In contrast, methods for treating the obstruction of GEV include endoscopic approaches (EVL, EIS) or radiological intervention (such as BRTO). Recent portal hypertensive bleeding suggested TIPS or BRTO as firstline treatments in the prevention of rebleeding. BRTO is a procedure for treatment of fundal varices associated with a large gastro-/splenorenal collateral. The technique involves retrograde cannulation of the left renal vein by the jugular or femoral vein, followed by balloon occlusion and slow infusion of sclerosant to obliterate the gastro-/splenorenal collateral and fundal varices. Several variations of the technique exist, such as balloon-occluded antegrade transvenous obliteration or occlusion of the collateral by the placement of a vascular plug or coils. BRTO has the theoretical advantage over TIPS that it does not divert portal blood inflow from the liver. On the other hand, BRTO and its variations might increase portal pressure and might worsen complications, such as ascites or bleeding from EV. In this regard, if NSBB is combined with BRTO and its variations (we called interventional devascularization) for those HVPG responders, the drawbacks of interventional devascularization might be overcome. Therefore, the investigators conducted this RCT to compare the effectiveness and safety of TIPS with those of interventional devascularization in the prevention of rebleeding from gastric varices.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREinterventional devascularizationInterventional devascularization (BRTO and its variations) is a procedure for treatment of fundal varices associated with a large gastro-/splenorenal collateral.
PROCEDURETIPSTIPS is very effective in the treatment of bleeding GV, with more than a 90% success rate for initial hemostasis. It frequently requires additional embolization of spontaneous collaterals feeding the varices. The incidence of encephalopathy was higher after TIPS.

Timeline

Start date
2020-06-01
Primary completion
2022-12-31
Completion
2022-12-31
First posted
2019-12-13
Last updated
2020-02-05

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04198259. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.