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Evaluating Clinical Effects of a Spray-Type Bio-absorbable Adhesion Barrier System in Paediatric Patients

A Prospective Single-blind Randomised Controlled Trial Evaluating Clinical Effects of a Novel Spray-Type Bio-absorbable Adhesion Barrier System (AdSpray™) in Paediatric Patients Requiring Laparotomy

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05255081
Acronym
PEARL
Enrollment
20
Registered
2022-02-24
Start date
2022-03-01
Completion date
2024-04-30
Last updated
2024-05-08

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

Conditions

Surgical Adhesions

Keywords

Paediatric surgery, surgical adhesions, medical device, biodegradable anti-adhesive agent

Brief summary

This is a prospective randomized single-blind study where a placebo group served the control, to confirm the efficacy and safety of AdSpray™ as an inhibitory effect of postoperative adhesion formation in paediatric patients who underwent laparotomy with stoma.

Detailed description

Postoperative adhesions are fibrovascular bands connecting the parietal peritoneum to the visceral peritoneum of intra-abdominal organs, or connecting intra-abdominal organs to one another, which developed unavoidably following virtually all body cavity surgeries. Adhesions affect up to 80-93% of patients following abdominal surgery. Being the leading cause of postoperative small bowel obstruction, it could potentially cause other enormous clinical problems including difficulty in subsequent operations, infertility, and chronic pain. The incidence of adhesion-related morbidity is estimated to be 2.2% to 19.5% in the pediatric population, among which large proportion of patients required subsequent surgical intervention. A variety of techniques and products (e.g. bioresorbable physical barrier agents, pharmacological adjuncts, etc) have been advocated for preventing postoperative adhesion formation. However, to date, no single treatment is proven to be effective and adhesions still remain a significant, unresolved postoperative complication both in adults and paediatric populations. To reduce postoperative adhesions, Terumo Corporation (Tokyo, Japan) has developed an adhesion barrier system (AdSpray™; Terumo Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) which is easy to use at the treatment site in various surgical procedures. Its ability of adhesion prevention had been demonstrated in porcine model study. Cezar et al and Suto et al subsequently published two human prospective randomized controlled trials on the use of this barrier system in adult patients undergoing gynaecological and gastrointestinal operations, which confirmed its safety and efficacy. However, to date, studies on the use of anti-adhesion agents in children are scarce and there is no study on this novel barrier system (AdSpray™) in children. In view of this, we plan to conduct a prospective randomized single-blind study where a placebo group served the control, to confirm the efficacy and safety of AdSpray™ as an inhibitory effect of postoperative adhesion formation in paediatric patients who underwent laparotomy with stoma. B. Study objective To investigate the effect of a novel spray-type, novel dextrin hydrogel adhesion barrier (AdSpray™; Terumo Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) on postsurgical adhesions. C. Study design and methods This is a prospective, single center, single-blinded randomized controlled trial using a parallel arm design and placebo group as the control. Patient enrollment will start in March 2022 and expected to end in 2023.

Interventions

DEVICEAdspray

Application of AdSpray™ over all organs under the laparotomy incision at the end of operation

Spray with saline would be applied to organs under incision

Sponsors

The University of Hong Kong
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Outcomes Assessor)

Masking description

After completion of necessary operative procedures in the primary operation, barrier agent (AdSpray™or Placebo) will be sprayed to fully cover the organs under the laparotomy incision. At the second-look surgery, laparoscopic video recordings of the area under the laparotomy incision will be made in both groups. For the efficacy evaluation, based on the laparoscopic images of the abdominal cavity at the time of the second-look surgery, the presence, extent, and severity of adhesions will be assessed by the adhesion-assessment team which is independent of the study. The independent adhesion-assessment team will assess the extent and severity of adhesions under the laparotomy incision on a 4-grade scale.

Intervention model description

Eligible subjects will be identified, and parents will be approached for patient recruitment. Once consent to participation is signed, the patients will be randomised into either treatment group (AdSpray™) or placebo-controlled group in 1:1 ratio using simple randomization. The adhesion-assessment team will be blinded to the group allocated. The spray will be prepared according to the group allocated by a dedicated scrub nurse. For treatment group, AdSpray™ will be instilled into the drug chamber; for placebo group, saline will be instilled instead.

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Patients requiring laparotomy and staged operation with closure of stoma as second operation e.g. Necrotising Enterocolitis, Anorectal malformation, Hirschsprung's disease, etc.

Exclusion criteria

* A history of hypersensitivity to substances derived from corn starch * A history of surgery in the abdominal cavity or pelvic cavity accompanied by a laparotomy scar * Patients with peritonitis * Laparoscopic assessment of adhesions may not be performed safely at the second-look surgery.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Incidence of adhesion6 monthsThe number of participants developed adhesion during the study period at the second operation assessment
Extent of adhesion6 monthsExtent of adhesion is classified into 4 grade: Grade 0 - none, Grade 1 - adhesion less than 1/3 the length of incision, Grade 2 - adhesions between 1/3 and \<2/3 the length of the incision, Grade 3 - Adhesion great or equal than 2/3 the length of the incision
Severity of adhesion6 monthsSeverity of adhesion is classified into 4 grade: Grade 0 - none, Grade 1 - film-like with no neovascularisation, Grade 2 - moderately thick with partial neovascularisation, Grade 3 - thick, solid adhesion with neovascularisation

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Adverse events6 monthsIntestinal obstruction, abscess, peritonitis, surgical wound infection, malfunction of device, etc.

Countries

Hong Kong

Outcome results

None listed

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