Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT05697562
Evaluation of Superior Rectal Arterial Embolization in Hemorrhoidal Disease
A Randomized Comparative Evaluation of Superior Rectal Arterial Embolization in Hemorrhoidal Disease
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 80 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
SRAE is a promising treatment of bleeding HD as a minimally invasive approach without sphincter damage nor direct mucosal anorectal trauma. Feasibility, efficacy and safety were studied in several trials. A randomized controlled study should confirm the benefits of this technique and will define its therapeutic role in HD. Embolization and DG-HAL are based on the same concept of vascular occlusion of hemorrhoidal branches of the rectal artery. Furthermore, DG-HAL and RBL are equally effective procedures. The assumption is that treatment with SRAE is not inferior in comparison to RBL or DG HAL in respectively patients without or with antiplatelet/anticoagulation therapy in terms of symptom control and bleeding (non-inferiority study).
Detailed description
Hemorrhoidal disease (HD) is the most common anorectal pathology. Therapeutic management of HD ranges from conservative treatment and instrumental treatment to surgical approach. Beside these, certain minimally invasive techniques such as radiofrequency ablation, laser coagulation and Superior Rectal Artery Embolization (SRAE) are gaining interest. SRAE is a promising treatment of bleeding HD as a minimally invasive approach without sphincter damage nor direct mucosal anorectal trauma. Feasibility, efficacy and safety were studied in several trials. A randomized controlled study should confirm the benefits of this technique and will define its therapeutic role in HD. Embolization and DG-HAL are based on the same concept of vascular occlusion of hemorrhoidal branches of the rectal artery. Furthermore, DG-HAL and RBL are equally effective procedures. The assumption is that treatment with SRAE is not inferior in comparison to RBL or DG HAL in respectively patients without or with antiplatelet/anticoagulation therapy in terms of symptom control and bleeding (non-inferiority study).
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| PROCEDURE | Rubber band ligatures (RBL) | This instrumental technique is realized during consultation. A rubber band is applied on top of each hemorrhoidal complex via a proctoscope. This banding causes an ulceration which heals with resulting fibrosis. The patient can receive a maximum of 3 RBL during each session, which can be repeated up to 3 times at a 6 weeks interval. |
| PROCEDURE | Superior Rectal Artery Embolization (SRAE) | This technique is realized under local anesthesia during a one-day hospitalization. The interventional radiologist will perform the procedure in the angiography room. After local anesthesia right femoral artery puncture is performed and a 4 F or 5 F introducer sheath is placed using the Seldinger technique. With an appropriate 4 or 5 F catheter the superior rectal artery is catheterized. With a microcatheter the different branches are selectively occluded with microcoils. The endpoint of embolization is reached when all SRA branches above the pubic ramus are embolized, with cessation of flow distally or a static column of contrast. The procedure can be repeated with addition of the embolization of the middle rectal wall artery (MRA) in case of failure after 12 weeks. |
| PROCEDURE | Doppler-Guided Hemorrhoidal Artery Ligation (DG-HAL) | The procedure is performed in lithotomy position with a modified proctoscope including a Doppler transducer (THD device) under anesthesia during a one-day hospitalization. This transanal Doppler guidance enables accurate detection and targeted suture ligation of the SRAs Following gel lubrication, the proctoscope is inserted through the anal canal reaching the low rectum, about 6-7 cm from the anal verge. After identification of the best place for artery ligation, the Doppler system is turned off. The artery will be directly ligated with a Z-stitch at the site of the best Doppler signal. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2023-06-01
- Primary completion
- 2030-12-31
- Completion
- 2030-12-31
- First posted
- 2023-01-26
- Last updated
- 2025-12-18
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Belgium
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05697562. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.