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Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial

BACKGROUND: Sodium hyaluronate (SH) solution has been used for submucosal injection in endoscopic resection to create a long-lasting submucosal fluid "cushion". Recently, we proved the usefulness and safety of 0.4% SH solution in endoscopic resection for gastric mucosal tumors. To evaluate...

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Autores principales: Hirasaki, Shoji, Kozu, Takahiro, Yamamoto, Hironori, Sano, Yasushi, Yahagi, Naohisa, Oyama, Tsuneo, Shimoda, Tadakazu, Sugano, Kentaro, Tajiri, Hisao, Takekoshi, Takao, Saito, Daizo
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2651182/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19128517
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-9-1
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author Hirasaki, Shoji
Kozu, Takahiro
Yamamoto, Hironori
Sano, Yasushi
Yahagi, Naohisa
Oyama, Tsuneo
Shimoda, Tadakazu
Sugano, Kentaro
Tajiri, Hisao
Takekoshi, Takao
Saito, Daizo
author_facet Hirasaki, Shoji
Kozu, Takahiro
Yamamoto, Hironori
Sano, Yasushi
Yahagi, Naohisa
Oyama, Tsuneo
Shimoda, Tadakazu
Sugano, Kentaro
Tajiri, Hisao
Takekoshi, Takao
Saito, Daizo
author_sort Hirasaki, Shoji
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Sodium hyaluronate (SH) solution has been used for submucosal injection in endoscopic resection to create a long-lasting submucosal fluid "cushion". Recently, we proved the usefulness and safety of 0.4% SH solution in endoscopic resection for gastric mucosal tumors. To evaluate the usefulness of 0.4% SH as a submucosal injection solution for colorectal endoscopic resection, we conducted an open-label clinical trial on six referral hospitals in Japan. METHODS: A prospective multi-center open-label study was designed. A total of 41 patients with 5–20 mm neoplastic lesions localized in the colorectal mucosa at six referral hospitals in Japan in a single year period from December 2002 to November 2003 were enrolled and underwent endoscopic resection with SH. The usefulness of 0.4% SH was assessed by the en bloc complete resection and the formation and maintenance of mucosal lesion-lifting during endoscopic resection. Safety was evaluated by analyzing adverse events during the study period. RESULTS: The usefulness rate was high (82.5%; 33/40). The following secondary outcome measures were noted: 1) steepness of mucosal lesion-lifting, 75.0% (30/40); 2) intraoperative complications, 10.0% (4/40); 3) time required for mucosal resection, 6.7 min; 4) volume of submucosal injection, 6.8 mL and 5) ease of mucosal resection, 87.5% (35/40). Two adverse events of bleeding potentially related to 0.4% SH were reported. CONCLUSION: Using 0.4% SH solution enabled sufficient lifting of a colorectal intramucosal lesion during endoscopic resection, reducing the need for additional injections and the risk of perforation. Therefore, 0.4% SH may contribute to the reduction of complications and serve as a promising submucosal injection solution due to its potentially superior safety in comparison to normal saline solution.
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spelling pubmed-26511822009-03-05 Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial Hirasaki, Shoji Kozu, Takahiro Yamamoto, Hironori Sano, Yasushi Yahagi, Naohisa Oyama, Tsuneo Shimoda, Tadakazu Sugano, Kentaro Tajiri, Hisao Takekoshi, Takao Saito, Daizo BMC Gastroenterol Research Article BACKGROUND: Sodium hyaluronate (SH) solution has been used for submucosal injection in endoscopic resection to create a long-lasting submucosal fluid "cushion". Recently, we proved the usefulness and safety of 0.4% SH solution in endoscopic resection for gastric mucosal tumors. To evaluate the usefulness of 0.4% SH as a submucosal injection solution for colorectal endoscopic resection, we conducted an open-label clinical trial on six referral hospitals in Japan. METHODS: A prospective multi-center open-label study was designed. A total of 41 patients with 5–20 mm neoplastic lesions localized in the colorectal mucosa at six referral hospitals in Japan in a single year period from December 2002 to November 2003 were enrolled and underwent endoscopic resection with SH. The usefulness of 0.4% SH was assessed by the en bloc complete resection and the formation and maintenance of mucosal lesion-lifting during endoscopic resection. Safety was evaluated by analyzing adverse events during the study period. RESULTS: The usefulness rate was high (82.5%; 33/40). The following secondary outcome measures were noted: 1) steepness of mucosal lesion-lifting, 75.0% (30/40); 2) intraoperative complications, 10.0% (4/40); 3) time required for mucosal resection, 6.7 min; 4) volume of submucosal injection, 6.8 mL and 5) ease of mucosal resection, 87.5% (35/40). Two adverse events of bleeding potentially related to 0.4% SH were reported. CONCLUSION: Using 0.4% SH solution enabled sufficient lifting of a colorectal intramucosal lesion during endoscopic resection, reducing the need for additional injections and the risk of perforation. Therefore, 0.4% SH may contribute to the reduction of complications and serve as a promising submucosal injection solution due to its potentially superior safety in comparison to normal saline solution. BioMed Central 2009-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2651182/ /pubmed/19128517 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-9-1 Text en Copyright ©2009 Hirasaki 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 Research Article
Hirasaki, Shoji
Kozu, Takahiro
Yamamoto, Hironori
Sano, Yasushi
Yahagi, Naohisa
Oyama, Tsuneo
Shimoda, Tadakazu
Sugano, Kentaro
Tajiri, Hisao
Takekoshi, Takao
Saito, Daizo
Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial
title Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial
title_full Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial
title_fullStr Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial
title_full_unstemmed Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial
title_short Usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: A prospective multi-center open-label trial
title_sort usefulness and safety of 0.4% sodium hyaluronate solution as a submucosal fluid "cushion" for endoscopic resection of colorectal mucosal neoplasms: a prospective multi-center open-label trial
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2651182/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19128517
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-9-1
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