Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3303165 Gastrointestinal Endoscopy 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundPrevious animal studies and a pilot clinical trial demonstrated that submucosal injection of a thiol compound called mesna could chemically soften connective tissues and thus facilitate endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD).ObjectiveTo evaluate whether mesna injection could reduce procedural times for gastric ESD.DesignDouble-blind, block-randomized, controlled trial.SettingUniversity hospital.PatientsA total of 101 patients with superficial gastric cancer indicated for ESD were enrolled and randomly assigned to either the mesna or control (saline solution) group.InterventionTraditional ESD was performed with a single bolus injection of mesna or saline solution.Main Outcome MeasurementsTime for submucosal dissection (TSD).ResultsEn bloc resection was achieved for all lesions in the mesna group (53/53) and 51 of 52 lesions (98.08%) in the control group. TSD was not statistically different between the groups (18.62 ± 13.9 [mean ± SD] minutes for the mesna group and 24.58 ± 24.55 [mean ± SD] minutes for the control group; P = .128), and there were fewer time-consuming cases (times over 30 minutes) in the mesna group compared with controls (7/53 vs 15/52; P = .049). Multivariate regression analysis demonstrated that use of mesna, specimen size, and the presence of fibrous scars were significantly correlated with TSD (P < .05).LimitationsSingle-center study.ConclusionTSD was not significantly different between the mesna and control injection groups, but multivariate analysis indicated that mesna injection reduced procedural challenges associated with the submucosal dissection. (Clinical trial registration number: UMIN000003786.)

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