The ACCURE-trial: the effect of appendectomy on the clinical course of ulcerative colitis, a randomised international multicenter trial (NTR2883) and the ACCURE-UK trial: a randomised external pilot trial (ISRCTN56523019)
posted on 2016-04-25, 15:28authored byT. J. Gardenbroek, T. D. Pinkney, S. Sahami, D. G. Morton, C. J. Buskens, C. Y. Ponsioen, P. J. Tanis, M. Löwenberg, G. R. van den Brink, I. A. M. J. Broeders, P. H. J. M. Pullens, T. Seerden, M. J. Boom, R. C. Mallant-Hent, R. E. G. J. M. Pierik, J. Vecht, M. N. Sosef, A. B. van Nunen, B. A. van Wagensveld, P. C. F. Stokkers, M. F. Gerhards, J. M. Jansen, Y. Acherman, A. C. T. M. Depla, G. H. H. Mannaerts, R. West, T. Iqbal, S. Pathmakanthan, R. Howard, L. Magill, Baljit Singh, Y. H. Oo, D. Negpodiev, M. G. W. Dijkgraaf, G. R. A. M. D’Haens, W. A Bemelman
Background
Over the past 20 years evidence has accumulated confirming the immunomodulatory role of the appendix in ulcerative colitis (UC). This led to the idea that appendectomy might alter the clinical course of established UC. The objective of this body of research is to evaluate the short-term and medium-term efficacy of appendectomy to maintain remission in patients with UC, and to establish the acceptability and cost-effectiveness of the intervention compared to standard treatment.
Methods/Design
These paired phase III multicenter prospective randomised studies will include patients over 18 years of age with an established diagnosis of ulcerative colitis and a disease relapse within 12 months prior to randomisation. Patients need to have been medically treated until complete clinical (Mayo score <3) and endoscopic (Mayo score 0 or 1) remission. Patients will then be randomised 1:1 to a control group (maintenance 5-ASA treatment, no appendectomy) or elective laparoscopic appendectomy plus maintenance treatment. The primary outcome measure is the one year cumulative UC relapse rate - defined both clinically and endoscopically as a total Mayo-score ≥5 with endoscopic subscore of 2 or 3. Secondary outcomes that will be assessed include the number of relapses per patient at 12 months, the time to first relapse, health related quality of life and treatment costs, and number of colectomies in each arm.
Discussion
The ACCURE and ACCURE-UK trials will provide evidence on the role and acceptability of appendectomy in the treatment of ulcerative colitis and the effects of appendectomy on the disease course.
Trial registration
NTR2883; ISRCTN56523019
Funding
The Dutch part of the study is funded by Nuts FondsOhra (project 2012–008) and an unrestricted grant from Dr. Falk Pharma GmbH, Freiburg, Germany. The Dutch part is approved by the Medical Ethics Committee from the Academic Medical Centre in Amsterdam. The UK part of the study is funded by the NIHR Research for Patient Benefit programme (project PB-PG-1112-29107).