Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT06197061

Comparison of Robot-assisted With Laparoscopic-assisted Modified Soave Procedure for Classical Hirschsprung Disease

Comparison of Robot-assisted With Laparoscopic-assisted Modified Soave With Short Muscular Cuff Anastomosis for Classical Hirschsprung Disease

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
130 (estimated)
Sponsor
Zunyi Medical College · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) is a rare congenital intestinal disease characterized by the absence of ganglion cells in the distal rectum, extending for variable distances into the proximal intestine.The \"pull-through\" reconstruction procedure described in 1949 by Orvar Swenson involving the removal of the aganglionic bowel and creating an anastomosis between the normally innervated bowel and the anal canal, remains the standard surgical approach for HSCR today. However, as rectal dissection by laparotomy in infants is technically difficult and can result in high rates of complications, other pull-through techniques were developed and several techniques are still widely used today. In our institute, we developed the laparoscopic-assisted modified Soave with short muscular cuff anastomosis in July 2017, and achieved good therapeutic effects. However, there have some patients suffered soiling incidents in the short period post-surgery. Therefore, we developed the robot-assisted modified Soave with short muscular cuff anastomosis procedures to protect the vital nerve and blood vessels of the pelvis from injury, decrease the injury of the sphincter. this clinical trials was to compare the efficacy of robot-assisted and laparoscopic-assisted modified Soave with short muscular cuff anastomosis procedures for classical Hirschsprung disease (HSCR).

Detailed description

Soave's first report on the endorectal pull-through without anastomosis approach to the treatment of Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) dates back to 1963. With the rapid development of laparoscopic operations in the early 1990s, Georgeson et al reported a technique utilizing laparoscopic dissection of the rectum combined with anal mucosal dissection in 1995. Subsequently, many laparoscopic approaches to modified Soave-Georgeson procedures were described, including short muscular cuff anastomosis, long cuff dissection, and short V-shaped partially resected cuff anastomosis.The purpose of these modifications is to decrease postoperative complications due to internal anal sphincter achalasia and rectal cuff. Wester et al used a short cuff operation that retained a muscular cuff of 1-2 cm and achieved excellent outcomes. Due to our increased experience to Soave-Georgeson operation, we have modified the Soave-Georgeson procedure that developed laparoscopic stepwise gradient cutting muscular cuff procedure and shortened the muscular cuff to approximately 1-2 cm in neonates and infants, or 3-4 cm in children. Good results using the laparoscopic stepwise gradient cutting muscular cuff (LSGC) procedure have been reported by Zheng et al. Although a few patients suffered enterocolitis of the LSGC procedure, we found that the incidence of enterocolitis in patients with a 1-2cm muscular cuff was lower than that in patients with a 3-4 cm muscular cuff. According to the above finding, we developed the laparoscopic-assisted modified Soave with short muscular cuff anastomosis in July 2017, and achieved good therapeutic effects. However, there have some patients suffered soiling incidents in the short period post-surgery. Therefore, we developed the robot-assisted modified Soave with short muscular cuff anastomosis procedures to protect the vital nerve and blood vessels of the pelvis from injury, decrease the injury of the sphincter. this clinical trials was to compare the efficacy of robot-assisted and laparoscopic-assisted modified Soave with short muscular cuff anastomosis procedures for classical Hirschsprung disease (HSCR).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURERAMSThe robotic arms were oriented from the caudal direction. Dissection was begun circumferentially at 1.0 cm above the peritoneal reflection. The rectum was mobilized outside the longitudinal muscle layer, with the anatomical plane farther away from Denonvillier's fascia and the nerve plexus anterior or lateral to the rectum. The mobilization of the rectum reached 4-7 cm into the pelvis. After the robot was unlocked, a circular incision was made 0.5-1 cm from the dentate line, dividing the mucosa upward by 0.5-1.0 cm, breaking through the muscular cuff, and exposing the robotic dissection plane in the pelvis. The diseased colon was then gently pulled out through the anus. The posterior wall of the muscular cuff was completely removed along the left and right sides, accounting for two-thirds of the whole circular muscular cuff to 0.5 cm of the dentate line edge. One third of the anterior wall of the muscular cuff was retained,we then performed Soave's anastomosis.
PROCEDURELAMSThe mesentery of the colon was separated by laparoscopy with the vessel of the pull-through bowel preserved. Under the rectal peritoneal reflex, close to the rectal wall separate with the electric hook, the anterior wall of the rectum was separated to the bladder neck or the posterior wall of the vagina. The posterior wall of the rectum can be separated down to 1cm above the dentate line. After the laparoscopy was unlocked, a circular incision was made 0.5-1 cm from the dentate line, dividing the mucosa upward by 0.5-1.0 cm, breaking through the muscular cuff, and exposing the laparoscopic dissection plane in the pelvis. The diseased colon was then gently pulled out through the anus. The posterior wall of the muscular cuff was completely removed along the left and right sides, accounting for two-thirds of the whole circular muscular cuff to 0.5 cm of the dentate line edge. One third of the anterior wall of the muscular cuff was retained,we then performed Soave's anastomosis.

Timeline

Start date
2020-02-07
Primary completion
2024-02-08
Completion
2024-10-10
First posted
2024-01-09
Last updated
2024-01-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06197061. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.