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The Use of Technical Vessel Sealing Devices for Recipient Hepatectomy in Liver Transplantation

-SEALIVE- The Use of Technical Vessel Sealing Devices for Recipient Hepatectomy in Liver Transplantation: Study Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03323242
Acronym
SEALIVE
Enrollment
69
Registered
2017-10-26
Start date
2018-08-01
Completion date
2021-09-01
Last updated
2018-07-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hepatectomy

Keywords

Vessel Sealing Devices, Liver Transplantation

Brief summary

The surgical technique used in liver transplantation has undergone constant Evolution in an effort towards towards a safe, highly standardized procedure. Despite this, the initial step of the recipients' hepatectomy has not been in the focus of clinical research thus far. Due to usually advanced coagulopathy in liver transplantation recipients, this part of the operation still bares the risk of severe hemorrhage. This trial is designed to compare an electrothermic, bipolar vessel sealing device (LigaSureTM) and an ultrasound dissector (HARMONIC ACE®+7) to standard surgical techniques during the recipients' hepatectomy in liver transplantation. In a single center, prospective, randomized, controlled, parallel three armed, confirmatory, open trial, LigaSureTM and HARMONIC ACE®+7 will be compared to standard surgical techniques which, utilize titanium clips and conventional knot tying ligations during the recipients' hepatectomy in liver transplantation. Intraoperative total blood loss is the primary endpoint of the trial. Secondary endpoints include blood loss during the hepatectomy, the duration of both the hepatectomy and the entire surgical procedure, as well as blood transfusion requirements of the procedure. To generate reliable data, intraoperative blood loss will be recorded with respect to all rinse fluids during surgery, ascites and by weighing used swabs to generate reliable data. At 80% power and an alpha of 0.025 for both either of the experimental groups, twenty-three subjects will be analysed per protocol in each study arm in order to detect a clinically relevant reduction of intraoperative blood loss. The intention to treat analysis will include sixty-nine patients. The follow up period for each patient will be 90 days for safety reasons, whereas all clinical outcomes will be measured within the first ten postoperative days. This is the first prospective, randomized trial comparing two innovative, technical methods of vessel sealing and dissection against standard techniques for recipient hepatectomy. This will be done to detect a relevant reduction of intraoperative blood loss during liver transplantation.The results of the trial are expected to improve patients' outcome and safety after liver transplantation and to increase the general safety of this procedure.

Detailed description

Liver transplantation (LT) is a well-established procedure for the treatment of end stage liver disease. Many improvements in the surgical technique rendered this operation relatively safe. Most important operative innovations after the initial introduction of LT in the clinical Routine undertaken by Starzl include the use of veno-venous bypass in LT, the piggy-back technique with preservation of the recipients' caval vein and it's modification which was introduced by Belghiti with side-to-side cavo-caval anastomosis. Nevertheless very few improvements have been introduced in the surgical technique with regards to tissue preparation and sealing the blood vessels during recipient hepatectomy. Due to end stage liver disease and both the recipients' general and coagulatory condition, the hepatectomy carries the risk of severe blood loss which can impair the outcome after LT. Usually the recipient hepatectomy is carried out as a combination of sharp dissection of the hepatic adhesions to the abdominal wall and the diaphragm and clip or suture ligature of small retrohepatic caval vein branches. With advances in surgical procedures and equipment, modern technologies have been introduced, which have shortened operation time and improved surgical outcomes. Exquisite equipment for liver parenchyma transection, such as Cavitron ultrasonic surgical aspirator, ultrasonic dissector (USD), LigaSure (LS) and Tissue Link can also be used to reduce hemorrhage in liver resection. The ultrasonic scalpel (Ethicon) is a new USD that cuts and coagulates tissue using ultrasound at frequencies higher than those used by an ultrasonic aspirator. This device can also serve as a grasper and basically utilizes a blade which oscillates at 55 kHz, thus producing heat and enabling coagulation of vessels. Recently, its use and potential advantages in open liver resection have been demonstrated. The main technical advancement in this field relates to decreased intra-operative bleeding. Results of using USD (Harmonic Scalpel) during recipient hepatectomy showed that this method is safe compared with conventional knot tying ligation regarding intra- and postoperative bleeding rate. The electrothermal bipolar vessel sealing device LS is another alternative, which applies electrothermal bipolar coagulation and dissection in one step. The LS dissection device seals the tissue first before it is divided (both Tasks are performed with the same device). This may prevent severe bleeding. Furthermore, the sealing device is capable of coping with the small liver veins which can be sealed and divided safely without the need for sutures or clips. Especially the latter of which is known for interfering with sufficient tangential clamping of the inferior caval vein (IVC) for side to side cavo-cavostomy during piggy-back LT. It was reported that the use of LS devices for recipient hepatectomy in LT. It was concluded that, LS vessel sealing was an efficient method and that vessel sealing of the caval and Portal veins as well as other structures could be safely performed in the setting of end-stage liver disease. To our knowledge, no randomized clinical trial has been conducted to compare various innovative dissection methods against the standard techniques used for recipient hepatectomy. While LS and USD have been proven to be used safely in several major surgical procedures, including liver resection, their ability to reduce blood loss in liver transplant recipient hepatectomy has not yet been evaluated systematically.

Interventions

DEVICELigaSure

The dissection of the small blood vessels and the connective tissue in the hepatoduodenal ligament is carried out with LigaSure

DEVICEHarmonic Ultrasonic dissector

The dissection of the small blood vessels and the connective tissue in the hepatoduodenal ligament is carried out with Harmonic Ultrasonic dissector

Sponsors

University Hospital Heidelberg
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Masking description

Blinding the surgical staff is impossible due to the use of different methods in the three groups under investigation. Since the primary endpoint total blood loss will be precisely recorded during surgery by independent staff and secondary endpoints are objective physiological findings, blinding the subjects is not needed. Therefore, the open design is not expected to cause any avoidable bias.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Allocation of donor liver via Eurotransplant to recipient * Recipients must be aged 18 or older * A signed, written informed consent for participation in the trial

Exclusion criteria

* High urgency state of recipient * Previous liver transplantation * Combined organ transplantation * Inability to give informed consent

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Total Blood loss during surgical procedureOne dayThe suction container fluid volume (in 20 milliliters) will be added to the weight (in grams) of all surgical swabs at the end of skin closure procedures (A). The difference of the density of the rinse solution (isotonic Sodium Chloride solution) and blood is approximately 0.055 g/cm³. Regarding the accuracy of these measurements, this difference is clinically irrelevant. The volume of the entire rinse fluid (in milliliters) that is used during the procedure and the amount of ascites (in milliliters) will be added to the known dry weight (in grams) of the respective number of surgical swabs that are used during the procedure and the known dry weight of the drip catching swab container (B). The total blood loss is defined as A minus B in milliliters.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Time from skin incision to end of hemostasis after hepatectomyOne day
Time from skin incision to end of skin closureOne day
Hemodynamic status during surgeryOne dayData on the mean arterial pressure and central venous pressure will be obtained at the beginning of hepatectomy after incision and adhesiolysis.
The number of packed red blood cells (PRBC) units transfused during surgeryOne day
The number of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) units transfused during surgeryOne day
The number of platelet units transfused during surgeryOne day
Blood loss during recipient hepatectomyOne day
Coagulation stateTen daysInternational Normalized Ratio, partial thromboplastin time and platelet levels of patients will be recorded pre- and postoperatively until POD 10.
Hemoglobin levelTen daysHemoglobin Levels of patients will be recorded pre- and postoperatively until POD 10.
Postoperative PRBC and FFP Transfusion until POD 10Ten days
Postoperative bleedingTen daysPostoperative hemorrhaging until POD 10 will be recorded and classified according to the Clavien-Dindo classification.
Postoperative morbidityThree monthsPostoperative morbidity will be recorded and classified according to the Clavien-Dindo classification.
Retransplantation rateThree months
Conversion rateOne dayConversion rate to alternative methods during recipient hepatectomy in LS and USD groups

Contacts

Primary ContactPhilipp Houben, MD
Philipp.Houben@med.uni-heidelberg.de+4962215636974

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026