| Literature DB >> 30805720 |
Toru Kono1, Mitsuo Shimada2, Masaaki Nishi2, Yuji Morine2, Kozo Yoshikawa2, Hidetoshi Katsuno3, Koutarou Maeda4, Keisuke Koeda5, Satoshi Morita6, Masahiko Watanabe7, Mitsuo Kusano8, Junichi Sakamoto9, Shigetoyo Saji10, Hiroki Sokuoka10, Yasuto Sato11, Yoshihiko Maehara10, Takashi Kanematsu12, Masaki Kitajima13.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Prolonged postoperative ileus (POI) is a common complication after open abdominal surgery (OAS). Daikenchuto (DKT), a traditional Japanese medicine that peripherally stimulates the neurogenic pathway, is used to treat prolonged POI in Japan. To analyze whether DKT accelerates the recovery from prolonged POI after OAS, we conducted a secondary analysis of three multicenter randomized controlled trials (RCTs).Entities:
Keywords: Body mass index; Kampo; Postoperative ileus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30805720 PMCID: PMC6647501 DOI: 10.1007/s00595-019-01787-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Today ISSN: 0941-1291 Impact factor: 2.549
Background factors of the main analysis (a) and non-main analysis (b)
| Factor | Placebo group | DKT group | Total | CMH test |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a) Main analysis group (group 1) | ||||
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 128 (65.3%) | 138 (64.5%) | 266 (64.9%) | |
| Female | 68 (34.7%) | 76 (35.5%) | 144 (35.1%) | |
| Age | ||||
| Mean | 68.0 | 67.8 | 67.9 | |
| Range | 28–88 | 28–88 | 28–88 | |
| BMI (kg/m2) | ||||
| Mean | 22.667 | 22.844 | 22.759 | |
| Range | 15.04–39.06 | 14.61–42.10 | 14.61–42.10 | |
| Coexisting diseases | ||||
| No | 100 (51.0%) | 115 (53.7%) | 215 (52.4%) | |
| Yes | 96 (49.0%) | 99 (46.3%) | 195 (47.6%) | |
| Medical history | ||||
| No | 99 (50.5%) | 118 (55.1%) | 217 (52.9%) | |
| Yes | 97 (49.5%) | 96 (44.9%) | 193 (47.1%) | |
| Surgery-related complications | ||||
| No | 169 (86.2%) | 179 (83.6%) | 348 (84.9%) | |
| Yes | 27 (13.8%) | 35 (16.4%) | 62 (15.1%) | |
| ECOG performance status | ||||
| 0 | 184 (93.9%) | 197 (92.1%) | 381 (92.9%) | |
| 1 | 12 (6.1%) | 17 (7.9%) | 29 (7.1%) | |
| Duration of surgery(min) | ||||
| Mean | 253.6 | 244.9 | 249.1 | |
| Range | 72–589 | 79–753 | 72–753 | |
| Loss of blood volume at surgery(mL) | ||||
| Mean | 458.9 | 513.6 | 487.5 | |
| Range | 0–6180 | 0–6800 | 0–6800 | |
| Average daily dose from 2 to 8d | ||||
| Mean | 13.95 | 13.56 | 13.75 | |
| Range | 0.0–15.7 | 0.0–15.0 | 0.0–15.7 | |
| Average daily dose until defecation | ||||
| Mean | 13.48 | 13.62 | 13.56 | |
| Range | 0.0–15.0 | 0.0–15.0 | 0.0–15.0 | |
| (b) Non-main analysis group | ||||
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 121 (72.9%) | 113 (68.9%) | 234 (70.9%) | |
| Female | 45 (27.1%) | 51 (31.1%) | 96 (29.1%) | |
| Age | ||||
| Mean | 68.0 | 65.9 | 66.9 | |
| Range | 35–91 | 37–88 | 35–91 | |
| BMI (kg/m2) | ||||
| Mean | 22.587 | 23.004 | 22.794 | |
| Range | 15.57–31.12 | 15.20–37.22 | 15.20–37.22 | |
| Coexisting diseases | ||||
| No | 89 (53.6%) | 100 (61.0%) | 189 (57.3%) | |
| Yes | 77 (46.4%) | 64 (39.0%) | 141 (42.7%) | |
| Medical history | ||||
| No | 100 (60.2%) | 91 (55.5%) | 191 (57.9%) | |
| Yes | 66 (39.8%) | 73 (44.5%) | 139 (42.1%) | |
| Surgery-related complications | ||||
| No | 117 (70.5%) | 128 (78.0%) | 245 (74.2%) | |
| Yes | 49 (29.5%) | 36 (22.0%) | 85 (25.8%) | |
| ECOG performance status | ||||
| 0 | 155 (93.4%) | 154 (93.9%) | 309 (93.6%) | |
| 1 | 11 (6.6%) | 10 (6.1%) | 21 (6.4%) | |
| Duration of surgery(min) | ||||
| Mean | 223.0 | 227.0 | 225.0 | |
| Range | 102–522 | 80–585 | 80–585 | |
| Loss of blood volume at surgery(mL) | ||||
| Mean | 308.8 | 330.3 | 319.5 | |
| Range | 10–1400 | 10–3343 | 10–3343 | |
| Average daily dose from 2 to 8d | ||||
| Mean | 11.68 | 12.63 | 12.15 | |
| Range | 0.0–15.0 | 0.0–15.0 | 0.0–15.0 | |
| Average daily dose until defecation | ||||
| Mean | – | – | – | – |
| Range | – | – | – | |
Values represent the number of patients (proportion in each group), mean, range, and p values of the CMH tests. The CMH tests were performed using table scores for discrete variables and rank scores for continuous variables. The presence of a surgery-related complication (“Yes”) was defined in cases of the development of at least one of following diseases: ileus, anastomotic leakage, intra-abdominal abscess, gastrointestinal motility disorder, abdominal distention, postoperative pancreatitis/pancreatic leak, or bacterial peritonitis. The common denominator in three different randomized controlled trials was the postoperative administration of DKT or placebo on days 2-8 (JFMC39-0902, 40-1001 and 42-1002)
CMH Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel test, BMI body mass index, DKT daikenchuto, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, CI confidence interval, d day, JFMC the Japanese Foundation for Multidisciplinary Treatment of Cancer
Fig. 1Cumulative defecation rate after surgery in the main analysis group. Curves represent the cumulative defecation rates of the Daikenchuto-treated and placebo-treated groups drawn using the Kaplan–Meier method. Censors are depicted using the “+” symbol on the curves. DKT daikenchuto
Fig. 2Cumulative defecation rate after surgery in the non-main analysis group. Curves represent the cumulative defecation rates of the Daikenchuto-treated and placebo-treated groups drawn using the Kaplan–Meier method. Censors are depicted using the “+” symbol on the curves. DKT daikenchuto
The results of the sensitivity analysis in the main analysis
| Factor | Number of patients | Stratified log-rank test | Stratified hazard ratio (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole main analysis population | 1.337 (1.096–1.631) | ||
| Subset | |||
| Age < 75 years | 1.406 (1.111–1.779) | ||
| BMI < 30 kg/m2 | 1.359 (1.110–1.665) | ||
| No medical history | 1.569 (1.169–2.104) | ||
| No coexisting diseases | 1.376 (1.044–1.814) | ||
| No surgery-related complications | 1.327 (1.069–1.647) | ||
| Average daily dose until defecation ≥ 10 g | 1.395 (1.130–1.723) | ||
Values represent the number of patients, p values of stratified log-rank tests, and stratified hazard ratios in the Daikenchuto-treated versus placebo-treated groups, along with 95% confidence intervals for the whole subgroup population and all subpopulations used in the sensitivity analysis
BMI body mass index, CI confidence interval