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UnknownNCT06070324

Effect of Suture Material on Postoperative Nipple Areolar Complex Widening

Effect of Suture Material on Postoperative Nipple Areolar Complex Widening: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
180 (estimated)
Sponsor
London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute OR Lawson Research Institute of St. Joseph's · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This will be a single-blinded study where participants are blinded to the suture type but the surgeon will draw a random, unmarked envelope containing the designated suture type at the start of the surgery. The patient population will be all patients undergoing breast surgery at the London Health Sciences Center (LHSC) - ie. University Hospital, Victoria Hospital and the Nazem Kadri Surgical Center, and St. Joseph's Hospital. Three (3) main procedure groups will be transgender gender-affirming top surgery, cisgender female breast reduction or augmentation (including healthy and cancer patients; subgroup analysis will be performed), and cisgender male gynecomastia surgery. The goal is n=180 patients, n=60 per type of suture with n=20 per type of procedure (totaling n=60 per type of procedure). NAC width for each breast will be measured intraoperatively, at 2 weeks postop, 6 weeks postop, 3 months postop, and 6 months postop. These measurements will be deidentified and logged into a secure data entry form. Information on whether a secondary outcome occurred (ie. infection, dehiscence, revision and nipple necrosis) will be logged in this form as well. Because the sutures will be kept non-visible under dressings until the clinical followup appointment 2 weeks postop, the patient will remain blinded as to the type of suture used on their NAC(s). At this point, absorbable sutures will have been largely dissolved and non-absorbable sutures will be removed.

Detailed description

This will be a single-blinded study where the participants will be blinded to the type of suture. The patient population will be all patients undergoing breast surgery at the London Health Sciences Center (LHSC) - ie. University Hospital, Victoria Hospital and the Nazem Kadri Surgical Center - and St. Joseph's Hospital falling into one of 3 categories: transmasculine gender affirming top surgery, cisgender female elective or oncologic breast surgery (mastopexy, breast reduction, breast augmentation, or nipple-sparing mastectomy), and cisgender male gynecomastia correction. Three sutures will be used: 4-0 Prolene, 4-0 Monocryl and 4-0 Stratafix. We will aim for n=180 participants, n=60 per type of suture, and n=60 per surgical category. This way, each suture type can be equally distributed among each surgical category. This means n=20 of each suture type will be used in n=20 of each surgery type. For example, n=20 top surgery patients will receive Prolene sutures, n=20 receive Monocryl, and n=20 receive Stratafix. All patients will be consented in the preop area on the day of their surgery by a member of the research team. The primary outcomes will be NAC diameter or "width" intraoperatively immediately after closing compared to NAC width 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months postoperatively. The horizontal and vertical widths will be measured at each time. Measurements are done with a ruler and recorded in centimeters. Prolene sutures will be removed at the 6-week postop visit as per current clinical practice. Absorbable will not be removed because they are absorbable. Statistical regression will be used to determine whether a certain type(s) of suture is optimal for minimizing NAC widening after surgery. Subgroup analyses will also be conducted to determine any confounding factors from heterogeneity in patient factors within each group. Secondary outcomes will be rates of infection, tip loss, nipple necrosis and dehiscence, and whether certain types of sutures increase these adverse outcomes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREBreast surgeryAny surgery involving incisions made along the nipple areolar complex. These would include transgender mastectomy, cisgender female breast reduction/augmentation/reconstruction, and cisgender male gynecomastia correction.
DEVICESuturing of surgical incisionThe closing of a surgical incision by using sutures so appose and maintain apposition of two skin edges. Suturing may or may not require knot-tying depending on the material of suture used.

Timeline

Start date
2023-12-01
Primary completion
2024-02-01
Completion
2024-11-01
First posted
2023-10-06
Last updated
2023-10-06

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06070324. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.