Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications (Sep 2020)

A prospective controlled randomized multicenter study to evaluate the severity of compensatory sweating after one-stage bilateral thoracic sympathectomy versus unilateral thoracic sympathectomy in the dominant side

  • Niura Noro Hamilton,
  • Miguel Lia Tedde,
  • Nelson Wolosker,
  • Wolfgang William Schmidt Aguiar,
  • Hylas Paiva da Costa Ferreira,
  • Humberto Alves de Oliveira,
  • Alexandre Marcelo Rodrigues Lima,
  • Fernando Luiz Westphal,
  • Marina Varela Braga de Oliveira,
  • Fabio de Oliveira Riuto,
  • Sergio Tadeu Lima F Pereira,
  • Guilherme Cançado Rezende,
  • Caroline Elizabeth Brero Valero,
  • Paulo M. Pego-Fernandes

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
p. 100618

Abstract

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Objective: To evaluate the contribution that unilateral thoracic sympathectomy in dominant side or two-stage bilateral thoracic sympathectomy can have as strategies to reduce the incidence of compensatory sweating after sympathectomy for palmar hyperhidrosis. Methods: This is a prospective, controlled, randomized multicenter trial of 200 participants with palmar hyperhidrosis, which will be randomized into two arms: (a) one-stage bilateral thoracic sympathectomy (control arm); or (b) unilateral thoracic sympathectomy in dominant side (intervention arm). At six months the participants submitted to unilateral procedure can make the contralateral surgery if they wanted it, creating a third group called two-stage bilateral sympathectomy. Participants will be evaluated for the degree of sweating by the Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale (HDSS) and of quality of life questionnaires. Results: 96 participants out of the 200 proposed have been included so far, with 48 participants randomized to each arm. From the sample 61 (63.5%) are female, with a mean age of 24 (20–32) years. There were exclusive palmar hiperhydrosis in 14 cases (14.5%), palmar and plantar hyperhidrosis in 36 (37.5%) cases, palmar and axillar hyperhidrosis in 12 (12,5%) cases and palmar-axillary-plantar hyperhidrosis in 34 (35,4%) cases. The age at the beginning of the disease was childhood (78%), with mean of time of disease 15 (11–22) years. Conclusions: If one or both hypothesis: (a) unilateral sympathectomy in dominant hand is a satisfactory treatment; b) two-stage bilateral sympathectomy causes less compensatory sweating than in one stage are confirmed there is a chance that surgical therapy for palmar hyperhidrosis can be changed for better.

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