COlonic Salvage by Therapeutic Appendectomy.

NCT03912714 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 123

Last updated 2024-10-02

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Rationale: The annual incidence of ulcerative colitis (UC) amounts to 6-8 new cases per 100.000. Patients are initially treated medically, and colitis refractory to medical management is treated surgically, mostly by means of an (emergency) colectomy or a procto-colectomy with ileal J-pouch anastomosis. Over the past 10 years evidence has been accumulating indicating that the appendix has an immunomodulatory role in patients with UC reducing the need for medication and perhaps even colectomy.

Objective: The objective of this prospective observational cohort study is to evaluate the effect of appendectomy on the disease course of patients with active ulcerative colitis despite standard step-up treatment including biologicals compared to usual care. The second objective is to evaluate if it is possible to predict response to appendectomy based on preoperative radiological or endoscopic findings by comparing results to histological characteristics in the resection specimen.

Study design: The design of the study is a multicentre prospective cohort study including patients with active UC despite standard step-up treatment including optimized biological treatment. Patients failing standard step-up medical treatment (including biologicals), that are discussed in the multidisciplinary meeting to be counselled for a JAK-inhibitor (e.g. tofacitinib, filgotinib) or restorative proctcolectomy with ileal-j pouch anastomosis, will be counselled for appendectomy as an alternative treatment option. All patients will undergo colonoscopy before the start of a new treatment according to current guidelines. Biopsies will be taken to histologically confirm ongoing inflammation. Cecal biopsies will be used to correlate histological findings to response to appendectomy. Patients will undergo assessment of the appendix by ultrasound before surgery. All patients will be followed according to study protocol.

Study population: All patients of 16 years and older, with established diagnosis of UC and ongoing disease activity despite standard step-up treatment including optimized biological treatment that are counselled for medication switch to a small molecule JAK-inhibitor or colectomy, will also be counselled for experimental appendectomy. Patients not interested in appendectomy will be asked for consent to collect data according to study protocol and represent the control group.

Group size calculations are based on an improvement in remission rates from 17% in the second line medical group to 40% in the appendectomy group. With a power of 80%, a 2-sided alpha of 0.05, and accounting for 10% loss to follow-up, a total of 67 patients are required in each group.

Intervention: A laparoscopic appendectomy will be performed in day care setting using a laparoscopic endostapler including the cecal base.

Comparison: Usual care consists of small molecule JAK-inhibitor (e.g. tofacitinib, filgotinib) or surgical treatment by restorative proctocolectomy with ileal J-pouch anastomosis.

Main study parameters/objectives: The primary outcome parameter is the number of patients achieving remission (Total Mayo score ≤2) 12 months after appendectomy. Secondary endpoints are reduction of medical therapy, the disease activity as measured with the Mayo score, colectomy rate, the health related quality of life and costs (EQ-5D, EORTC-QLQ-C30-QL and IBDQ), and histological appendix characteristics predictive of response.

Conditions

  • Colitis, Ulcerative

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Laparoscopic appendectomy

Surgery will be performed under general anaesthesia. The laparoscopic appendectomy can be performed with the use of 3 trocars; one subumbilical, one suprapubic and one in the lower right quadrant of the abdomen. The appendix is removed using a laparoscopic endostapler enabling a safe and complete appendectomy with the cross stapling line at coecal base. Laparoscopic appendectomy will be performed by a gastrointestinal surgeon with sufficient experience in laparoscopic appendectomies (\>20).

PROCEDURE

Endoscopic appendix biopsies

Appendix biopsies will only be taken when the scope easily slides into the lumen of the appendix (the scope will not be pushed into the appendix lumen)

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • University Hospital Birmingham

    collaborator OTHER
  • Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Christianne Buskens, MD, PhD · Amsterdam Medical Centre

Study Design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
16 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2018-08-24
Primary Completion
2024-09-20
Completion
2024-09-20

Countries

  • Netherlands

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT03912714 on ClinicalTrials.gov