Clinical Trial: Non-traumatic Rupture of the Spleen. Can Splenectomy be Applied Selectively?

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Unknown status
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: Non-traumatic Rupture of the Spleen. Can Splenectomy be Applied Selectively?

Brief Summary:

Purpose: Non-traumatic rupture of the spleen should be suspected when patients (especially young men) present with abdominal pain and a history of acute infectious or myeloproliferative disorders. Preoperative imaging studies in hemodynamically stable patients may obviate the need for surgery even in the presence of massive hemoperitoneum. The purpose of this research is to inform acute management where spontaneous rupture is suspected in order to avoid surgery where appropriate, rationalise angiographic intervention and blood transfusion.

Hypothesis: Indentifying the cause of injuries can help target preventative intervention.

Background: Non-traumatic rupture of the spleen is a rare condition. It may occur in the diseased spleen secondary to a variety of pathologies including malaria and myeloproliferative disorders. In some cases rupture may occur in an apparently normal spleen. The incidence, symptoms, causes, therapy and prognosis are poorly defined. The investigators, therefore, propose an extension of retrospective analysis conducted, presented and published in 2003 to examine all the cases of non-traumatic splenic rupture treated at Ziv Medical Centre from the last 26 years to present.

Methods: Analysis of the medical notes of all patients with spontaneous splenic rupture in the medical archives.

The investigators hope to determine the true incidence of this condition within the local population, increasingly diverse in origin, travel and the incidence of predisposing infectious disease; and to devise a practical protocol in their safe diagnosis and management, especially as non-operative interventions have grown in safety and effectiveness.

Discussion: Although rare,

Detailed Summary:

Non-traumatic rupture of the spleen is a rare condition. It may occur in the diseased spleen should be suspected when patients (especially young men) present with abdominal pain and a history of acute infectious or myeloproliferative disorders. Rarely, rupture may occur within an apparently normal spleen. The incidence, symptoms, causes, therapy and prognosis are poorly defined. We, therefore, propose an extension of retrospective analysis already presented in 2003 to examine all the cases of non-traumatic splenic rupture treated at Ziv Medical Centre over the last 26 years and to rationalise treatment plans taking into consideration pitfalls and complications in management so that the care and outcome for these patients is improved.

Methods:

Patients with a diagnosis of non-traumatic splenic rupture will be identified from the hospital database, their medical records retrieved and analysed to determine their actual diagnosis and examine their management and outcomes.

Time frame:

The retrospective data over the last 26 years will be analysed over the next year.

Endpoints:

This is a retrospective study. Our records indicate that as non-traumatic splenic rupture is a rare diagnosis, there are fewer than 50 patients listed with this diagnosis, fewer still, where examination of the medical records will reveal this to be the actual diagnosis.

Inclusion criteria:

All patients where review of the medical records indicates non-traumatic rupture of the spleen.

Exclusion criteria:

Sponsor: Ziv Hospital

Current Primary Outcome: Splenectomy [ Time Frame: 26 years ]

This is a retrospective study looking at each case and determining the clinical course. Possible patterns in presentation that determines investigation and management will be observed. Patients with infectious disease or myeloproliferative disease who develop actute abdominal pain routinely have a CT scan and surgical review. If CT shows a bleed and the patient is unstable, the patient must have an intervention to stop the bleeding - usually surgical splenectomy. The outcome is to determine the clinical course of non-traumatic splenic haemorrhage.


Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome:

Original Secondary Outcome:

Information By: Ziv Hospital

Dates:
Date Received: April 4, 2013
Date Started: April 2013
Date Completion: April 2014
Last Updated: April 29, 2013
Last Verified: April 2013