Omentum preservation versus complete omentectomy in gastrectomy for gastric cancer (OMEGA trial): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Publication date

2024-09-04

Authors

Keywani, K
Eshuis, W J
Borgstein, A B J
van Det, M J
van Duijvendijk, P
van Etten, B
Grimminger, P P
Heisterkamp, J
Lagarde, S M
Luyer, M D P

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Background: Potentially curative therapy for locally advanced gastric cancer consists of gastrectomy, usually in combination with perioperative chemotherapy. An oncological resection includes a radical (R0) gastrectomy and modified D2 lymphadenectomy; generally, a total omentectomy is also performed, to ensure the removal of possible microscopic disease. However, the omentum functions as a regulator of regional immune responses to prevent infections and prevents adhesions which could lead to bowel obstructions. Evidence supporting a survival benefit of routine complete omentectomy during gastrectomy is lacking. Methods: OMEGA is a randomized controlled, open, parallel, non-inferiority, multicenter trial. Eligible patients are operable (ASA < 4) and have resectable (≦ cT4aN3bM0) primary gastric cancer. Patients will be 1:1 randomized between (sub)total gastrectomy with omentum preservation distal of the gastroepiploic vessels versus complete omentectomy. For a power of 80%, the target sample size is 654 patients. The primary objective is to investigate whether omentum preservation in gastrectomy for cancer is non-inferior to complete omentectomy in terms of 3-year overall survival. Secondary endpoints include intra- and postoperative outcomes, such as blood loss, operative time, hospital stay, readmission rate, quality of life, disease-free survival, and cost-effectiveness. Discussion: The OMEGA trial investigates if omentum preservation during gastrectomy for gastric cancer is non-inferior to complete omentectomy in terms of 3-year overall survival, with non-inferiority being determined based on results from both the intention-to-treat and the per-protocol analyses. The OMEGA trial will elucidate whether routine complete omentectomy could be omitted, potentially reducing overtreatment. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05180864. Registered on 6th January 2022.

Keywords

Adult, Aged, Disease-Free Survival, Equivalence Trials as Topic, Female, Gastrectomy/adverse effects, Humans, Lymph Node Excision/adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Omentum/surgery, Organ Sparing Treatments/methods, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Stomach Neoplasms/surgery, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Journal Article

Citation

Keywani, K, Eshuis, W J, Borgstein, A B J, van Det, M J, van Duijvendijk, P, van Etten, B, Grimminger, P P, Heisterkamp, J, Lagarde, S M, Luyer, M D P, Markar, S R, Meijer, S L, Pierie, J P E N, Roviello, F, Ruurda, J P, van Sandick, J W, Sosef, M, Witteman, B P L, de Steur, W O, Lissenberg-Witte, B I, van Berge Henegouwen, M I & Gisbertz, S S 2024, 'Omentum preservation versus complete omentectomy in gastrectomy for gastric cancer (OMEGA trial) : study protocol for a randomized controlled trial', Trials, vol. 25, no. 1, 588. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-024-08396-z