Cargando…

Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The standard whole-colon tests used to investigate patients with symptoms of colorectal cancer are barium enema and colonoscopy. Colonoscopy is the reference test but is technically difficult, resource intensive, and associated with adverse events, especially in the elderly. Bar...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Halligan, Steve, Lilford, Richard J, Wardle, Jane, Morton, Dion, Rogers, Pauline, Wooldrage, Katherine, Edwards, Rob, Kanani, Reshma, Shah, Urvi, Atkin, Wendy
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2174515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17963520
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-8-32
_version_ 1782145357669466112
author Halligan, Steve
Lilford, Richard J
Wardle, Jane
Morton, Dion
Rogers, Pauline
Wooldrage, Katherine
Edwards, Rob
Kanani, Reshma
Shah, Urvi
Atkin, Wendy
author_facet Halligan, Steve
Lilford, Richard J
Wardle, Jane
Morton, Dion
Rogers, Pauline
Wooldrage, Katherine
Edwards, Rob
Kanani, Reshma
Shah, Urvi
Atkin, Wendy
author_sort Halligan, Steve
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The standard whole-colon tests used to investigate patients with symptoms of colorectal cancer are barium enema and colonoscopy. Colonoscopy is the reference test but is technically difficult, resource intensive, and associated with adverse events, especially in the elderly. Barium enema is safer but has reduced sensitivity for cancer. CT colonography ("virtual colonoscopy") is a newer alternative that may combine high sensitivity for cancer with safety and patient acceptability. The SIGGAR trial aims to determine the diagnostic efficacy, acceptability, and economic costs associated with this new technology. METHODS: The SIGGAR trial is a multi-centre randomised comparison of CT colonography versus standard investigation (barium enema or colonoscopy), the latter determined by individual clinician preference. Diagnostic efficacy for colorectal cancer and colonic polyps measuring 1 cm or larger will be determined, as will the physical and psychological morbidity associated with each diagnostic test, the latter via questionnaires developed from qualitative interviews. The economic costs of making or excluding a diagnosis will be determined for each diagnostic test and information from the trial and other data from the literature will be used to populate models framed to summarise the health effects and costs of alternative approaches to detection of significant colonic neoplasia in patients of different ages, prior risks and preferences. This analysis will focus particularly on the frequency, clinical relevance, costs, and psychological and physical morbidity associated with detection of extracolonic lesions by CT colonography. RESULTS: Recruitment commenced in March 2004 and at the time of writing (July 2007) 5025 patients have been randomised. A lower than expected prevalence of end-points in the barium enema sub-trial has caused an increase in sample size. In addition to the study protocol, we describe our approach to recruitment, notably the benefits of extensive piloting, the use of a sham-randomisation procedure, which was employed to determine whether centres interested in participating were likely to be effective in practice, and the provision of funding for dedicated sessions for a research nurse at each centre to devote specifically to this trial. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN95152621
format Text
id pubmed-2174515
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-21745152008-01-04 Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study Halligan, Steve Lilford, Richard J Wardle, Jane Morton, Dion Rogers, Pauline Wooldrage, Katherine Edwards, Rob Kanani, Reshma Shah, Urvi Atkin, Wendy Trials Study Protocol BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The standard whole-colon tests used to investigate patients with symptoms of colorectal cancer are barium enema and colonoscopy. Colonoscopy is the reference test but is technically difficult, resource intensive, and associated with adverse events, especially in the elderly. Barium enema is safer but has reduced sensitivity for cancer. CT colonography ("virtual colonoscopy") is a newer alternative that may combine high sensitivity for cancer with safety and patient acceptability. The SIGGAR trial aims to determine the diagnostic efficacy, acceptability, and economic costs associated with this new technology. METHODS: The SIGGAR trial is a multi-centre randomised comparison of CT colonography versus standard investigation (barium enema or colonoscopy), the latter determined by individual clinician preference. Diagnostic efficacy for colorectal cancer and colonic polyps measuring 1 cm or larger will be determined, as will the physical and psychological morbidity associated with each diagnostic test, the latter via questionnaires developed from qualitative interviews. The economic costs of making or excluding a diagnosis will be determined for each diagnostic test and information from the trial and other data from the literature will be used to populate models framed to summarise the health effects and costs of alternative approaches to detection of significant colonic neoplasia in patients of different ages, prior risks and preferences. This analysis will focus particularly on the frequency, clinical relevance, costs, and psychological and physical morbidity associated with detection of extracolonic lesions by CT colonography. RESULTS: Recruitment commenced in March 2004 and at the time of writing (July 2007) 5025 patients have been randomised. A lower than expected prevalence of end-points in the barium enema sub-trial has caused an increase in sample size. In addition to the study protocol, we describe our approach to recruitment, notably the benefits of extensive piloting, the use of a sham-randomisation procedure, which was employed to determine whether centres interested in participating were likely to be effective in practice, and the provision of funding for dedicated sessions for a research nurse at each centre to devote specifically to this trial. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN95152621 BioMed Central 2007-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2174515/ /pubmed/17963520 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-8-32 Text en Copyright © 2007 Halligan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Halligan, Steve
Lilford, Richard J
Wardle, Jane
Morton, Dion
Rogers, Pauline
Wooldrage, Katherine
Edwards, Rob
Kanani, Reshma
Shah, Urvi
Atkin, Wendy
Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study
title Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study
title_full Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study
title_fullStr Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study
title_full_unstemmed Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study
title_short Design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate CT colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: The SIGGAR study
title_sort design of a multicentre randomized trial to evaluate ct colonography versus colonoscopy or barium enema for diagnosis of colonic cancer in older symptomatic patients: the siggar study
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2174515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17963520
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-8-32
work_keys_str_mv AT halligansteve designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT lilfordrichardj designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT wardlejane designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT mortondion designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT rogerspauline designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT wooldragekatherine designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT edwardsrob designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT kananireshma designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT shahurvi designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy
AT atkinwendy designofamulticentrerandomizedtrialtoevaluatectcolonographyversuscolonoscopyorbariumenemafordiagnosisofcoloniccancerinoldersymptomaticpatientsthesiggarstudy