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Colonic stenting versus emergency surgery for acute left-sided malignant colonic obstruction: a multicentre randomised trial - 03/08/11

Doi : 10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70035-3 
Jeanin E van Hooft, DrMD a, e, , Willem A Bemelman, ProfMD b, Bas Oldenburg, MD g, Andreas W Marinelli, MD h, Martijn F Lutke Holzik, MD f, Marina J Grubben, MD i, Mirjam A Sprangers, ProfPhD c, Marcel G Dijkgraaf, PhD d, Paul Fockens, ProfMD a

for the collaborative Dutch Stent-In study group

  Members listed in webappendix

a Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands 
b Department of Surgery, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands 
c Department of Medical Psychology, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands 
d Clinical Research Unit, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands 
e Department of Gastroenterology, Medisch Spectrum Twente, Enschede, Netherlands 
f Department of Surgery, Medisch Spectrum Twente, Enschede, Netherlands 
g Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University Medical Centre, Utrecht, Netherlands 
h Department of Surgery, Medical Centre Haaglanden, Den Haag, Netherlands 
i Department of Gastroenterology, Sint Elisabeth Hospital, Tilburg, Netherlands 

* Correspondence to: Dr Jeanin E van Hooft, Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 9, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, Netherlands

Summary

Background

Colonic stenting as a bridge to elective surgery is an alternative for emergency surgery in patients with acute malignant colonic obstruction, but its benefits are uncertain. We aimed to establish whether colonic stenting has better health outcomes than does emergency surgery.

Methods

Patients with acute obstructive left-sided colorectal cancer were enrolled from 25 hospitals in the Netherlands and randomly assigned (1:1 ratio) to receive colonic stenting as a bridge to elective surgery or emergency surgery. The randomisation sequence was computer generated with permuted blocks and was stratified by centre; treatment allocation was concealed by use of a web-based application. Investigators and patients were unmasked to treatment assignment. The primary outcome was mean global health status during a 6-month follow-up, which was assessed with the QL2 subscale of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer quality-of-life questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30). Analysis was by intention to treat. This study is registered, number ISRCTN46462267.

Findings

Between March 9, 2007, and Aug 27, 2009, 98 patients were assigned to receive colonic stenting (n=47 patients) or emergency surgery (n=51). Two successive interim analyses showed increased 30-day morbidity in the colonic stenting group, with an absolute risk increase of 0·19 (95% CI −0·06 to 0·41) in analysis of the first 60 patients (14 of 28 patients receiving colonic stenting vs 10 of 32 receiving emergency surgery), and an absolute risk increase of 0·19 (−0·01 to 0·37) in analysis of the first 90 patients (23 of 47 patients vs 13 of 43). In accordance with the advice of the data safety monitoring committee, the study was suspended on Sept 18, 2009, and ended on March 12, 2010. At the final analysis of 98 patients, mean global health status during follow-up was 63·0 (SD 23·8) in the colonic stenting group and 61·4 (SD 21·9) in the emergency surgery group; after adjustment for baseline values, mean global health status did not differ between treatment groups (−4·7, 95% CI −14·8 to 5·5, p=0·36). No difference was recorded between treatment groups in 30-day mortality (absolute risk difference −0·01, 95% CI −0·14 to 0·12, p=0·89), overall mortality (−0·02, −0·17 to 0·14, p=0·84), morbidity (−0·08, −0·27 to 0·11, p=0·43), and stoma rates at latest follow-up (0·09, −0·10 to 0·27, p=0·35). However, the emergency surgery group had an increased stoma rate directly after initial intervention (0·23, 0·04 to 0·40, p=0·016) and a reduced frequency of stoma-related problems (between-group difference −12·0, −23·7 to −0·2, p=0·046). The most common serious adverse events were abscess (three in the colonic stenting group vs four in the emergency surgery group), perforations (six vs none), and anastomotic leakage (five vs one), and the most common adverse events were pneumonia (three vs one) and wound infection (one vs three).

Interpretation

Colonic stenting has no decisive clinical advantages to emergency surgery. It could be used as an alternative treatment in as yet undefined subsets of patients, although with caution because of concerns about tumour spread caused by perforations.

Funding

None.

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Vol 12 - N° 4

P. 344-352 - avril 2011 Retour au numéro
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