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Laparoscopic cholecystectomy versus percutaneous catheter drainage for acute cholecystitis in high risk patients (CHOCOLATE): Multicentre randomised clinical trial

Authors :
C.S. Loozen
Donald L. van der Peet
A.A. Pronk
Verena N. N. Kornmann
Philip M Kruyt
Grard A. P. Nieuwenhuijzen
Daphne Roos
Thomas L. Bollen
Hjalmar C. van Santvoort
Bert van Ramshorst
Dirk J. Gouma
Johannes C Kelder
Rogier M P H Crolla
K. Kortram
Djamila Boerma
Anna A. W. van Geloven
Sandra C. Donkervoort
Peter van Duijvendijk
Marc G. Besselink
Surgery
AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system
CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life
AGEM - Digestive immunity
Ear, Nose and Throat
AGEM - Endocrinology, metabolism and nutrition
Graduate School
CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life
Source :
BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 363:k3965. British Medical Association, BMJ (Online), 363:k3965. BMJ Publishing Group, Loozen, C S, van Santvoort, H C, van Duijvendijk, P, Besselink, M G, Gouma, D J, Nieuwenhuijzen, G A, Kelder, J C, Donkervoort, S C, van Geloven, A A, Kruyt, P M, Roos, D, Kortram, K, Kornmann, V N, Pronk, A, van der Peet, D L, Crolla, R M, van Ramshorst, B, Bollen, T L & Boerma, D 2018, ' Laparoscopic cholecystectomy versus percutaneous catheter drainage for acute cholecystitis in high risk patients (CHOCOLATE): Multicentre randomised clinical trial ', BMJ (Online), vol. 363, k3965 . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k3965
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess whether laparoscopic cholecystectomy is superior to percutaneous catheter drainage in high risk patients with acute calculous cholecystitis.DesignMulticentre, randomised controlled, superiority trial.Setting11 hospitals in the Netherlands, February 2011 to January 2016.Participants142 high risk patients with acute calculous cholecystitis were randomly allocated to laparoscopic cholecystectomy (n=66) or to percutaneous catheter drainage (n=68). High risk was defined as an acute physiological assessment and chronic health evaluation II (APACHE II) score of 7 or more.Main outcome measuresThe primary endpoints were death within one year and the occurrence of major complications, defined as infectious and cardiopulmonary complications within one month, need for reintervention (surgical, radiological, or endoscopic that had to be related to acute cholecystitis) within one year, or recurrent biliary disease within one year.ResultsThe trial was concluded early after a planned interim analysis. The rate of death did not differ between the laparoscopic cholecystectomy and percutaneous catheter drainage group (3% v 9%, P=0.27), but major complications occurred in eight of 66 patients (12%) assigned to cholecystectomy and in 44 of 68 patients (65%) assigned to percutaneous drainage (risk ratio 0.19, 95% confidence interval 0.10 to 0.37; Pv 5%, Pv 5 days, PConclusionLaparoscopic cholecystectomy compared with percutaneous catheter drainage reduced the rate of major complications in high risk patients with acute cholecystitis.Trial registrationDutch Trial Register NTR2666.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09598146
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 363:k3965. British Medical Association, BMJ (Online), 363:k3965. BMJ Publishing Group, Loozen, C S, van Santvoort, H C, van Duijvendijk, P, Besselink, M G, Gouma, D J, Nieuwenhuijzen, G A, Kelder, J C, Donkervoort, S C, van Geloven, A A, Kruyt, P M, Roos, D, Kortram, K, Kornmann, V N, Pronk, A, van der Peet, D L, Crolla, R M, van Ramshorst, B, Bollen, T L & Boerma, D 2018, ' Laparoscopic cholecystectomy versus percutaneous catheter drainage for acute cholecystitis in high risk patients (CHOCOLATE): Multicentre randomised clinical trial ', BMJ (Online), vol. 363, k3965 . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k3965
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89e7e02eb32013ed8731af326a0d9716
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k3965