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DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-1892-9
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Minimally invasive versus open distal pancreatectomy (LEOPARD): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Thijs de Rooij,Jony van Hilst,Jantien A. Vogel,Hjalmar C. van Santvoort,Marieke T. de Boer,Djamila Boerma,Peter B. van den Boezem,Bert A. Bonsing,K. Bosscha,Peter-Paul Coene,Freek Daams,Ronald M. van Dam,Marcel G. W. Dijkgraaf,Casper H. van Eijck,Sebastiaan Festen,Michael F. Gerhards,Bas Groot Koerkamp,Jeroen Hagendoorn,Erwin van der Harst,Ignace H. de Hingh,C. H. C. Dejong,Geert Kazemier,Joost M. Klaase,Ruben H J de Kleine,Cornelis J. van Laarhoven,Daan J. Lips,Misha Luyer,I. Quintus Molenaar,Vincent B. Nieuwenhuijs,Gijs A. Patijn,Daphne Roos,Joris J. Scheepers,George P. van der Schelling,Pascal Steenvoorde,Rutger-Jan Swijnenburg,Jan H. Wijsman,Mohammad Abu Hilal,Olivier R. Busch,Marc G. Besselink

Medicine
Randomized controlled trial
Observational study
2017
Observational cohort studies have suggested that minimally invasive distal pancreatectomy (MIDP) is associated with better short-term outcomes compared with open distal pancreatectomy (ODP), such as less intraoperative blood loss, lower morbidity, shorter length of hospital stay, and reduced total costs. Confounding by indication has probably influenced these findings, given that case-matched studies failed to confirm the superiority of MIDP. This accentuates the need for multicenter randomized controlled trials, which are currently lacking. We hypothesize that time to functional recovery is shorter after MIDP compared with ODP even in an enhanced recovery setting.LEOPARD is a randomized controlled, parallel-group, patient-blinded, multicenter, superiority trial in all 17 centers of the Dutch Pancreatic Cancer Group. A total of 102 patients with symptomatic benign, premalignant or malignant disease will be randomly allocated to undergo MIDP or ODP in an enhanced recovery setting. The primary outcome is time (days) to functional recovery, defined as all of the following: independently mobile at the preoperative level, sufficient pain control with oral medication alone, ability to maintain sufficient (i.e. >50%) daily required caloric intake, no intravenous fluid administration and no signs of infection. Secondary outcomes are operative and postoperative outcomes, including clinically relevant complications, mortality, quality of life and costs.The LEOPARD trial is designed to investigate whether MIDP reduces the time to functional recovery compared with ODP in an enhanced recovery setting.Dutch Trial Register, NTR5188 . Registered on 9 April 2015.
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    Minimally invasive versus open distal pancreatectomy (LEOPARD): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial” is a paper by Thijs de Rooij Jony van Hilst Jantien A. Vogel Hjalmar C. van Santvoort Marieke T. de Boer Djamila Boerma Peter B. van den Boezem Bert A. Bonsing K. Bosscha Peter-Paul Coene Freek Daams Ronald M. van Dam Marcel G. W. Dijkgraaf Casper H. van Eijck Sebastiaan Festen Michael F. Gerhards Bas Groot Koerkamp Jeroen Hagendoorn Erwin van der Harst Ignace H. de Hingh C. H. C. Dejong Geert Kazemier Joost M. Klaase Ruben H J de Kleine Cornelis J. van Laarhoven Daan J. Lips Misha Luyer I. Quintus Molenaar Vincent B. Nieuwenhuijs Gijs A. Patijn Daphne Roos Joris J. Scheepers George P. van der Schelling Pascal Steenvoorde Rutger-Jan Swijnenburg Jan H. Wijsman Mohammad Abu Hilal Olivier R. Busch Marc G. Besselink published in 2017. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.