The purpose of this this study is to determine if a structured educational training program is successful in teaching surgeons a new operative technique. It will then be determined if this new operative technique is safe.
This study is a multi-center, Phase 1 clinical trial to determine the safety and feasibility of minimally invasive inguinal lymph node dissection for patients with melanoma. Licensed surgeons who have undergone special training, including a course at the Mayo Clinic Rochester in minimally invasive lymph node dissection (MILND) will perform the new procedure at their home institutions. The study will characterize the learning curve of MILND in the clinical setting, and evaluate the safety of the new operative technique. The hypotheses for this study are: 1) minimally invasive groin dissection is a safe procedure. 2) a structured educational training program is a feasible and effective method to train practicing surgeons in this novel procedure and 3) pre-course generic laparoscopic technical skills correlate with minimally invasive superficial groin dissection performance in a clinical setting, including operative oncologic standards and safety metrics.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
88
Operative intervention will be a minimally invasive inguinal lymphadenectomy, which is a three trocar technique to the inguinal dissection, that respects the same anatomic boundaries as the conventional open procedure
Mayo Clinic in Arizona
Scottsdale, Arizona, United States
John Wayne Cancer Institute
Santa Monica, California, United States
Mayo Clinic in Florida
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Proficiency score per surgery
The proficiency score is a function of the lymph nodes pathologically identified, the amount of blood transfused and the operative time. The range is 0 to 3, with higher proficiency in performing the procedure being 3.
Time frame: Approximately 90 days following surgical procedure
Morbidity and percentage of patients converted to open surgical procedure
Perioperative morbidity will be prospectively collected and reported.Percentage of participants that require conversion from MILND to open procedure (standard of care). Conversion to the open procedure is required if the operation is not progressing, an adequate oncologic procedure cannot be completed or if bleeding is encountered that cannot be safety controlled videoscopically.
Time frame: Approximately 90 days following surgical procedure
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H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute
Tampa, Florida, United States
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, New York, United States
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, North Carolina, United States
MetroHealth Medical Center
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
The Ohio State University Medical Center
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Fox Chase Cancer Center
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
...and 1 more locations