Effect of Prophylactic Embolization on Patients With Blunt Trauma at High Risk of Splenectomy
Autor: | Sandrine Barbois, Antoine Vilotitch, Mathieu Rodière, Catherine Arvieux, Frederic Douane, Fatah Tidadini, Alison Foote, Christophe Trésallet, Pierre Bouzat, Marie-Christine Lemoine, Emilie Lermite, Vincent Dubuisson, Jean-Luc Bosson, Frédéric Thony, Valérie Monnin-Bares, Julien Frandon, Jean-Stéphane David |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors medicine.medical_treatment Splenectomy 030230 surgery Wounds Nonpenetrating law.invention Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences Pseudoaneurysm Return to Work 0302 clinical medicine Randomized controlled trial Interquartile range law medicine Clinical endpoint Humans Prospective Studies Embolization Watchful Waiting business.industry Arterial Embolization Splenic Rupture Length of Stay Middle Aged medicine.disease Embolization Therapeutic Surgery Blunt trauma 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Female Tomography X-Ray Computed business Splenic Artery Aneurysm False Spleen |
Zdroj: | JAMA Surgery. 155:1102 |
ISSN: | 2168-6254 |
Popis: | Splenic arterial embolization (SAE) improves the rate of spleen rescue, yet the advantage of prophylactic SAE (pSAE) compared with surveillance and then embolization only if necessary (SURV) for patients at high risk of spleen rupture remains controversial.To determine whether the 1-month spleen salvage rate is better after pSAE or SURV.In this randomized clinical trial conducted between February 6, 2014, and September 1, 2017, at 16 institutions in France, 133 patients with splenic trauma at high risk of rupture were randomized to undergo pSAE or SURV. All analyses were performed on a per-protocol basis, as well as an intention-to-treat analysis for specific events.Prophylactic SAE, preferably using an arterial approach via the femoral artery, or SURV.The primary end point was an intact spleen or a spleen with at least 50% vascularized parenchyma detected on an arterial computed tomography scan at 1 month after trauma, assessed by senior radiologists masked to the treatment group. Secondary end points included splenectomy and pseudoaneurysm, secondary SAE after inclusion, complications, length of hospital stay, quality-of-life score, and length of time off work or studies during the 6-month follow-up.A total of 140 patients were randomized, and 133 (105 men [78.9%]; median age, 30 years [interquartile range, 23-47 years]) were retained in the study. For the primary end point, data from 117 patients (57 who underwent pSAE and 60 who underwent SURV) could be analyzed. The number of patients with at least a 50% viable spleen detected on a computed tomography scan at month 1 was not significantly different between the pSAE and SURV groups (56 of 57 [98.2%] vs 56 of 60 [93.3%]; difference, 4.9%; 95% CI, -2.4% to 12.1%; P = .37). By the day 5 visit, there were significantly fewer splenic pseudoaneurysms among patients in the pSAE group than in the SURV group (1 of 65 [1.5%] vs 8 of 65 [12.3%]; difference, -10.8%; 95% CI, -19.3% to -2.1%; P = .03), significantly fewer secondary embolizations among patients in the pSAE group than in the SURV group (1 of 65 [1.5%] vs 19 of 65 [29.2%]; difference, -27.7%; 95% CI, -41.0% to -15.9%; P .001), and no difference in the overall complication rate between the pSAE and SURV groups (19 of 65 [29.2%] vs 27 of 65 [41.5%]; difference, -12.3%; 95% CI, -28.3% to 4.4%; P = .14). Between the day 5 and month 1 visits, the overall complication rate was not significantly different between the pSAE and SURV groups (11 of 59 [18.6%] vs 12 of 63 [19.0%]; difference, -0.4%; 95% CI, -14.4% to 13.6%; P = .96). The median length of hospitalization was significantly shorter for patients in the pSAE group than for those in the SURV group (9 days [interquartile range, 6-14 days] vs 13 days [interquartile range, 9-17 days]; P = .002).Among patients with splenic trauma at high risk of rupture, the 1-month spleen salvage rate was not statistically different between patients undergoing pSAE compared with those receiving SURV. In view of the high proportion of patients in the SURV group needing SAE, both strategies appear defendable.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02021396. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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