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Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study

BACKGROUND: Development of abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) in patients with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP) has a strong impact on the course of disease. Number of patients with this complication increases during the years due more aggressive fluid resuscitation, much bigger proportion of patie...

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Autores principales: Radenkovic, Dejan V, Bajec, Djordje, Ivancevic, Nenad, Bumbasirevic, Vesna, Milic, Natasa, Jeremic, Vasilije, Gregoric, Pavle, Karamarkovic, Aleksanadar, Karadzic, Borivoje, Mirkovic, Darko, Bilanovic, Dragoljub, Scepanovic, Radoslav, Cijan, Vladimir
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2913911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20624281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2482-10-22
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author Radenkovic, Dejan V
Bajec, Djordje
Ivancevic, Nenad
Bumbasirevic, Vesna
Milic, Natasa
Jeremic, Vasilije
Gregoric, Pavle
Karamarkovic, Aleksanadar
Karadzic, Borivoje
Mirkovic, Darko
Bilanovic, Dragoljub
Scepanovic, Radoslav
Cijan, Vladimir
author_facet Radenkovic, Dejan V
Bajec, Djordje
Ivancevic, Nenad
Bumbasirevic, Vesna
Milic, Natasa
Jeremic, Vasilije
Gregoric, Pavle
Karamarkovic, Aleksanadar
Karadzic, Borivoje
Mirkovic, Darko
Bilanovic, Dragoljub
Scepanovic, Radoslav
Cijan, Vladimir
author_sort Radenkovic, Dejan V
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Development of abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) in patients with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP) has a strong impact on the course of disease. Number of patients with this complication increases during the years due more aggressive fluid resuscitation, much bigger proportion of patients who is treated conservatively or by minimal invasive approach, and efforts to delay open surgery. There have not been standard recommendations for a surgical or some other interventional treatment of patients who develop ACS during the SAP. The aim of DECOMPRESS study was to compare decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure and percutaneus puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in these patients. METHODS: One hundred patients with ACS will be randomly allocated to two groups: I) decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure or II) percutaneus puncture with placement of abdominal catheter. Patients will be recruited from five hospitals in Belgrade during two years period. The primary endpoint is the mortality rate within hospitalization. Secondary endpoints are time interval between intervention and resolving of organ failure and multi organ dysfunction syndrome, incidence of infectious complications and duration of hospital and ICU stay. A total sample size of 100 patients was calculated to demonstrate that decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure can reduce mortality rate from 60% to 40% with 80% power at 5% alfa. CONCLUSION: DECOMPRESS study is designed to reveal a reduction in mortality and major morbidity by using decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure in comparison with percutaneus puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with ACS during SAP. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NTC00793715
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spelling pubmed-29139112010-08-03 Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study Radenkovic, Dejan V Bajec, Djordje Ivancevic, Nenad Bumbasirevic, Vesna Milic, Natasa Jeremic, Vasilije Gregoric, Pavle Karamarkovic, Aleksanadar Karadzic, Borivoje Mirkovic, Darko Bilanovic, Dragoljub Scepanovic, Radoslav Cijan, Vladimir BMC Surg Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Development of abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) in patients with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP) has a strong impact on the course of disease. Number of patients with this complication increases during the years due more aggressive fluid resuscitation, much bigger proportion of patients who is treated conservatively or by minimal invasive approach, and efforts to delay open surgery. There have not been standard recommendations for a surgical or some other interventional treatment of patients who develop ACS during the SAP. The aim of DECOMPRESS study was to compare decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure and percutaneus puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in these patients. METHODS: One hundred patients with ACS will be randomly allocated to two groups: I) decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure or II) percutaneus puncture with placement of abdominal catheter. Patients will be recruited from five hospitals in Belgrade during two years period. The primary endpoint is the mortality rate within hospitalization. Secondary endpoints are time interval between intervention and resolving of organ failure and multi organ dysfunction syndrome, incidence of infectious complications and duration of hospital and ICU stay. A total sample size of 100 patients was calculated to demonstrate that decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure can reduce mortality rate from 60% to 40% with 80% power at 5% alfa. CONCLUSION: DECOMPRESS study is designed to reveal a reduction in mortality and major morbidity by using decompresive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure in comparison with percutaneus puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with ACS during SAP. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NTC00793715 BioMed Central 2010-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2913911/ /pubmed/20624281 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2482-10-22 Text en Copyright ©2010 Radenkovic 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
Radenkovic, Dejan V
Bajec, Djordje
Ivancevic, Nenad
Bumbasirevic, Vesna
Milic, Natasa
Jeremic, Vasilije
Gregoric, Pavle
Karamarkovic, Aleksanadar
Karadzic, Borivoje
Mirkovic, Darko
Bilanovic, Dragoljub
Scepanovic, Radoslav
Cijan, Vladimir
Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
title Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
title_full Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
title_fullStr Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
title_full_unstemmed Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
title_short Decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
title_sort decompressive laparotomy with temporary abdominal closure versus percutaneous puncture with placement of abdominal catheter in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome during acute pancreatitis: background and design of multicenter, randomised, controlled study
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2913911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20624281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2482-10-22
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