EFFICACY OF OCTREOTIDE IN THE PREVENTION OF PANCREATIC FISTULA AFTER ELECTIVE PANCREATIC RESECTIONS - A PROSPECTIVE, CONTROLLED, RANDOMIZEDCLINICAL-TRIAL
M. Montorsi et al., EFFICACY OF OCTREOTIDE IN THE PREVENTION OF PANCREATIC FISTULA AFTER ELECTIVE PANCREATIC RESECTIONS - A PROSPECTIVE, CONTROLLED, RANDOMIZEDCLINICAL-TRIAL, Surgery, 117(1), 1995, pp. 26-31
Background. A prospective, randomized controlled clinical trial was co
nducted in 33 Italian surgical departments with the aim of evaluating
the efficacy of octreotide in the prevention of pancreatic fistula aft
er elective pancreatic resections. Methods. Between July 1990 and May
1992, 278 patients were Enrolled in the study. Fifty-four dropped out
because of unresectable disease and six were excluded because of proto
col violation; the remaining 218 were randomly assigned to the octreot
ide group (n = 111) or to the placebo group (n = 107). There were 131
men and 87 women with a mean age of 58.2 +/- 11.7 yrs. Pancreaticoduod
enectomy was the most common operation performed (n = 143), sixty-four
percent of patients had a pancreatic or periampullary cancer chronic
pancreatitis accounted for 8.2% of cases. Results. Mortality rate was
6.9%. A pancreatic fistula occurred in 31 patients (14.2%), 9% in the
octreotide group and 19.6% in the placebo group (p < 0.05). Morbidity
rate was significantly lower in the octreotide (21.6%) than in the pla
cebo group (36.4%) (p < 0.05). When specific pancreatic complications
were grouped together and evaluated the), occurred less frequently in
the treated (15.3%) than in the placebo group (29.9%) (p < 0.05). Conc
lusions. Octreotide was able to reduce significantly the incidence of
pancreatic fistula after elective pancreatic resections.