Abstract

Abstract Aim Colorectal anastomotic leak (AL) remains a significant challenge. The M-OMENTUM study compared omental-derived stromal-vascular cell-fraction (OSVCF) / alginate gel composite vs control subgroups to prevent murine AL. Methods C57BL-6 mice were subjected to an AL model with a leak rate (LR) of 40% and randomised (1:1) to OSVCF / alginate gel or control subgroups (gel alone and no treatment) powered to detect a 20% minimum difference (50% absolute reduction in LR); HO Licence PP9886008. Mice underwent laparotomy and colo-colonic anastomoses. In the intervention group, OSVCF was harvested and applied to the anastomosis in an alginate gel. Mice underwent schedule 1 killing at day 7 or earlier if they failed to meet wellness thresholds. The primary outcome was LR. Secondary outcomes included leak severity, weight, and adhesion score. An intention-to-treat analysis was performed. Results 128 mice (M:64/F:64), mean age 13.1 weeks (SD,1.2), mean weight, 24.1g (SD,4.3) were randomised. OSVCF/Gel containing mean 3.3x103cells/mg (SD,0.3x103) was applied in the intervention group. Overall LR was 49.2%. There was a numerical difference in LRs between the intervention group (30/64, 46.9%) and control groups (33/64, 51.5%) with a LR reduction of 9.1% (RR 0.91 [95%CI:0.64-1.69]; P=0.72). 12/33(36.4%) that received gel alone and 5/33(15.2%) that received no treatment developed an abscess rather than feculent peritonitis (RR 2.26 [95%CI:1.11-5.20]; P=0.04). Conclusions OSVCF/gel produced a 9.1% reduction in LR, but this did not reach statistical significance. The application of gel to an anastomosis alters the severity of anastomotic leak, favouring abscess formation rather than faecal peritonitis.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call