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Recurrence and Anal Fistula Patient Reported Outcomes Trial
Sponsor: National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Summary
Perianal fistulas are a chronic anorectal condition associated with significant morbidity, including pain, persistent discharge, infection, and impaired continence, all of which can substantially affect patients' quality of life. Surgical management aims to eradicate the fistulous tract while preserving anal sphincter function and continence. Despite numerous available surgical techniques, high-quality comparative evidence regarding optimal management remains limited. This prospective observational study aims to evaluate clinical outcomes, functional outcomes, and patient-reported quality of life following surgical treatment of perianal fistulas. The study will collect both clinician-reported and patient-reported outcomes over a 12-month follow-up period. Outcomes of interest include fistula healing, recurrence, postoperative complications, continence status, symptom burden, and health-related quality of life. The findings are expected to provide real-world data that may inform clinical decision-making and contribute to improved patient-centered care.
Official title: Prospective Study of Functional Disorders and Quality of Life Following Surgical Management of Perianal Fistulas
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Start Date
2026-01-01
Completion Date
2030-01-01
Last Updated
2026-03-19
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Perianal fistula surgical repair
Patients undergo the operative procedure that their treating colorectal surgeon selects as routine clinical care for a primary or recurrent perianal fistula. The operative approach may be a sphincter-dividing technique (e.g., fistulotomy or fistulectomy) or a sphincter-preserving technique (e.g., ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract \[LIFT\], mucosal advancement flap, laser fistula treatment, fistula plug, autologous biologic product injection, or seton placement). No investigational devices or experimental protocols are used; the study records the specific technique, intra-operative details, and any adjunctive measures (draining seton, pre-operative imaging, antibiotics, etc.) to allow comparison of real-world outcomes across all accepted surgical modalities for perianal fistulas.
Locations (1)
Ippokrateio Hospital
Athens, Greece