Brief Summary Study title: Indocyanine green (ICG)-guided omental shield anastomosis (ICG-OSA) technique for cervical esophagogastric anastomosis in esophageal cancer surgery Purpose: To evaluate whether a novel surgical technique can reduce the risk of anastomotic leakage after minimally invasive esophageal cancer surgery. Eligible participants: Adults aged 18-80 years with histologically confirmed esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) in the middle or lower thoracic esophagus who are scheduled for esophagectomy. The technique: All participants will undergo the ICG-OSA procedure, which uses indocyanine green fluorescence imaging to assess gastric perfusion, creates a T-shaped esophagogastric anastomosis, and wraps the anastomosis with a pedicled omental flap. Outcome assessments: The primary outcome is anastomotic leakage rate within 30 days after surgery. Secondary assessments include surgical site infection, anastomotic stricture, and hospitalization costs. Study site: Daping Hospital, Army Medical Center, Chongqing, China Study duration: December 2025 to March 2027 Contact: For more information, please contact the research team at Daping hospital.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
73
Step 1: ICG-guided gastric conduit prep: IV ICG fluorescence laparoscopy assesses gastroepiploic arcade (Koskas types) and perfusion zones (red=good, blue=poor), marks optimal anastomotic site on greater curvature, optimizes conduit tailoring. Step 2: T-Shaped Stapled Anastomosis\*\*: 1cm opening on posterior greater curvature wall at best perfusion zone, side-to-side stapling of posterior esophagus to greater curvature, closes common opening, reinforces with absorbable sutures. Step 3: Omental Shield: mobilizes pedicled omentum with good blood supply, 360° sleeve-wrap of anastomosis + 2cm area, fixes with 4-6 absorbable sutures to gastric wall above/below, ensures no tension/torsion.
Army Medical Center of the People's Liberation Army
Chongqing, Chongqing Municipality, China
Anastomotic leakage rate within 30 days postoperatively
Anastomotic leakage rate assessed by clinical evaluation, computed tomography (CT) scan with oral contrast, and endoscopy according to ECCG criteria.
Time frame: Up to 30 days postoperatively (critical assessment window: postoperative day 7±1)
Subclinical anastomotic leakage rate
Turbid mediastinal drainage fluid with positive bacterial culture, but requiring no intervention (i.e., no puncture drainage, stent placement, or surgery); daily recording of drainage fluid characteristics, with positive culture results confirmed by laboratory reports.
Time frame: Daily through postoperative day 30
Postoperative anastomotic stenosis rate
Anastomotic stricture rate diagnosed by endoscopy and dysphagia symptoms.
Time frame: 6 months postoperatively
Anastomotic leakage-related complication rate
Complications directly related to anastomotic leakage, including pulmonary infection, empyema, mediastinal infection, and sepsis. Complications will be graded using the Clavien-Dindo classification system. Diagnosis will be confirmed by clinical symptoms (fever, leukocytosis), microbiological cultures, and imaging findings (CT scan showing fluid collections or air-fluid levels). Each complication will be documented with onset date, severity grade, and required interventions.
Time frame: Up to 30 days postoperatively
Health economic indicators
Total medical costs from hospital admission to discharge, including operation fees, anesthesia, medication, laboratory tests, imaging studies, hospital bed, and other related expenses. Data will be extracted from the hospital information system (HIS) at discharge and recorded in the case report form.Number of days from the date of surgery to hospital discharge, calculated as (discharge date minus surgery date + 1 day).
Time frame: From hospital admission through hospital discharge, an average of 10 days
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