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RecruitingNCT06800469

Gut Microbiota Analysis in Patients Undergoing Duodencephalopancreasectomy for Pancreatic Cancer

Gut Microbiota Analysis in Patients Undergoing Duodencephalopancreasectomy for Pancreatic Cancer (MIcRobiome Analysis in Patients UnderGoing PancrEatico-duodenectomy for Pancreatic Cancer MIRAGE Study)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (estimated)
Sponsor
IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Pancreatic head cancer represents one of the most frequent malignancies with an incidence of about 13500 new cases each year. The primary objective of the study is to test whether there are bacterial species associated with increased risk of complications in patients with peri-ampullary neoplasia undergoing DCP.

Detailed description

Pancreatic head cancer represents one of the most frequent malignancies with an incidence of about 13500 new cases each year. The only curative strategy for such neoplasm is still surgical resection by duodenocephalopancreasectomy (DCP) surgery. However, this procedure has a postoperative morbidity of about 70% with a severe complication rate of 20%. The most frequent complications are pancreatic fistula, biliary fistula, and infectious complications in general. These complications often account for a high postoperative mortality rate that even in high-volume centers reaches 5%. Although some predictive risk factors are known (comorbidities and the patient's age, the consistency of the pancreatic stump to be anastomized and/or type of pathology treated), there is still no study that has evaluated the influence of the gut microbiota in the determinism of complications. This hypothesis appears suggestive and supported by indirect evidence from the literature. Some preliminary studies performed in the field of colo-rectal surgery have shown that the presence of certain bacterial families such as Lachnospiraceae or Bacteroidaceae are correlated with a significant increase in anastomotic dehiscence. Low microbial diversity also appears to be correlated with increased risk of anastomotic dehiscence. In contrast, the presence of other species such as Prevotella copri or Streptococcus genus seem to correlate with a reduced risk of dehiscence. The primary objective of the study is: to test whether there are bacterial species associated with increased risk of complications in patients with peri-ampullary neoplasia undergoing DCP. Other objectives to be verified are: 1. the association between bacterial species and the occurrence of pancreatic fistula in terms of frequency and severity 2. the association between bacterial species and the occurrence of biliary fistula in terms of frequency and severity 3. the association between bacterial species and the occurrence of infectious complications of any kind.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTMicrobiota analysisUpon acquisition of informed consent, fecal, digiunal mucosa, biliary and pancreatic fluid samples will be collected for microbiota analysis

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-11
Primary completion
2025-07-01
Completion
2025-07-01
First posted
2025-01-30
Last updated
2025-01-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06800469. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.