Intracorporeal versus extracorporeal anastomosis in right colectomy – a protocol for a randomised trial

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INTRODUCTION: A minimally invasive approach in colorectal surgery reduces surgical stress compared with open surgery. Today, the gold standard in the treatment of right-sided colonic cancer is a minimally invasive approach, which can be performed with either a “minimally invasive assisted” technique – a combination of open and minimally invasive surgery with an extracorporeal anastomosis (ECA) or with a “totally minimally invasive” technique with intracorporeal anastomosis (ICA). The prevailing technique is ECA, but there is no conclusive evidence on the superiority of one technique over the other, and randomised trials comparing ICA with ECA are warranted. We hypothesised that ICA will yield improved recovery compared with ECA. METHODS: This is a triple blind, multicentre, randomised controlled trial comparing robotic right colectomy with ECA with robotic right colectomy with ICA. We plan to include 100 patients undergoing elective minimally invasive right colectomies in two colorectal centres in Denmark. The primary outcome is patient-reported post-operative recovery, and secondary outcomes are additional measures of post-operative recovery (pain, analgesics, nausea and vomiting, time to first flatus/bowel movement, length of hospital stay), operative time, intraoperative complications, conversions, readmissions, reoperations, 30-and 90-day morbidity and mortality. CONCLUSION: The results of this randomised controlled trial will contribute with valuable knowledge on the best surgical management of right-sided colonic cancer.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA09200710
JournalDanish Medical Journal
Volume68
Issue number5
Number of pages8
ISSN2245-1919
Publication statusPublished - 2021

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