This is a pilot study to investigate the usefulness of closure of mucosal defect after gastric endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) in patients that are at high risk of post-procedural haemorrhage. Delayed haemorrhage is still an important adverse event of ESD, occurring more frequently for gastric lesions. Risk factors identified for delayed haemorrhage include chronic kidney disease, use of antithrombotic agent, lesion size \>20mm, specimen size \>30mm. Current established methods to prevent this complications could not completely eliminate the chance of bleeding, especially among high-risk cases. Closure of ESD defect may prevent ongoing exposure of submucosal vessels to gastric acid, and further reduce the risk of delayed haemorrhage. The investigators conduct this study to investigate the effect of closing the defect with endoscopic clips and loop. 30 patients who are undergoing gastric ESD deemed high risk of delayed haemorrhage would be recruited, with closure of defect after resection. The rate of delayed haemorrhage would be compared with historical cohort of patients.
Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is an endoscopic technique aiming to achieve en-bloc resection of mucosal neoplastic lesion in the gastrointestinal tract. Since the first report of ESD in 2002, the indication of the procedure has been expanding. Over the years, large-scale prospective study of ESD in the stomach has been reported. It is now considered as the standard of treatment for early gastric cancer confined to the mucosa, achieving an excellent overall survival comparable to that of surgical resection. As compared to conventional endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR), ESD is technically more challenging and also carries higher procedural risks. Important adverse events associated with gastric ESD include hemorrhage (intraoperative or delayed) and perforation. The reported incidence of delayed hemorrhage of gastric ESD is generally higher than that of esophageal or colorectal ESD5. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis identified risk factors for post-ESD delayed hemorrhage as follow: chronic kidney disease (OR 3.38), use of antithrombotic agent (OR 1.63), lesion size \>20mm (OR 2.70), specimen size \>30mm (OR 2.85). Established methods of preventing post-ESD hemorrhage include the use of proton pump inhibitor (PPI) and prophylactic coagulation of visible vessels after ESD7-9. However, both methods could not completely eliminate the chance of bleeding, especially among high-risk cases. Additional strategies may be required to further reduce the risk of delayed hemorrhage. Recently, Kataoka Y et al investigated the use of polyglycolic acid (PGA) sheets for covering the ESD defect in a randomized controlled trial. Unfortunately the endoscopic "shielding" method did not decrease the rate of post-ESD hemorrhage. The study had an unexpectedly low rate of bleeding in the control arm, which maybe due to the suboptimal inclusion criteria. On the other hand, with recent advances in endoscopic closure methods such as the use of OverStitchTM (Apollo Endosurgery, Inc), loop-clip purse string closure and line-assisted closure, complete closure of post-resection defect (even full thickness defects) is technically feasible. It is unclear whether achieving complete closure of the mucosal defect after gastric ESD could reduce the risk of delayed hemorrhage. Therefore the investigators decided to perform this pilot study to investigate the efficacy of this technique. The purpose of this study is to investigate the clinical usefulness of endoscopic closure of mucosal defect after gastric ESD in patients at high risk of post-ESD hemorrhage. Technical success, clinical success and the incidence of post-ESD adverse events would be recorded. Comparative study would be conducted with historical control.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
Closure of ESD defect would be performed with clip loop purse string technique
Historical control with patients undergoing ESD without closure of ESD defect
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
RECRUITINGTechnical success rate
Rate of complete closure of the ESD defect in the index endoscopic resection procedure
Time frame: 1 day
Clinical success rate
A persistent closure of ESD defect during follow-up endoscopy at 2 weeks
Time frame: 2 weeks
Rate of Post-ESD haemorrhage
Presence of blood clots in the stomach or the need for endoscopic hemostasis during urgent endoscopy if patient shows signs suspicious of bleeding
Time frame: 30 days
Rate of adverse events of the procedure
Rate of adverse events related to the procedure, graded according to the CTCAE criteria
Time frame: 30 days
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.