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Introduction Post-endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) pancreatitis (PEP) is a significant procedural adverse event (AE), occurring in 5–15% of cases and leading to substantial morbidity and mortality. Aggressive prolonged intravenous (IV) fluid regimens have demonstrated efficacy in reducing PEP in clinical trials. However, these regimens typically involve continuous infusion of IV fluids over 8–24 hours following ERCP, making them impractical for outpatient settings. Data on shorter hydration protocols are lacking. The STRIPE study aims to address this gap by evaluating short-term peri-procedural IV fluid regimens as a practical alternative for mitigating PEP. Methods and analysis This proof-of-concept, parallel-arm, randomised controlled trial will evaluate the impact of various short-term IV fluid regimens on post-ERCP serum amylase levels, a surrogate marker for PEP. Participants undergoing ERCP will be randomised into five groups, receiving 500 mL, 1000 mL, 1500 mL, 2000 mL or 2500 mL of IV Ringer’s lactate during the peri-procedural period. Patients, endoscopists and outcome assessors will be blinded to treatment allocation during the peri-procedural period. The primary outcome is the serum amylase level 24 hours post-ERCP. Secondary outcomes include PEP, 30-day AEs and unplanned healthcare encounters including those related to volume overload or cardiovascular AEs, duration of hospitalisation (for inpatients), death within 30 days and other relevant laboratory markers at 24 hours. A total of 505 participants (101 in each arm) will be enrolled to ensure adequate power after accounting for attrition and/or sample loss. Ethics and dissemination This trial was registered on clinicaltrials.gov on 7 February 2024. The study was approved by the University of Calgary Conjoint Health Research Ethics Board (REB23-0625). On study completion, data will be made available on reasonable request to the corresponding author after completion of the study. Study dissemination and knowledge translation is planned via presentations at scholarly meetings, publications in peer-reviewed journals and, ideally, via adoption of results into clinical practice guidelines. Trial registration number NCT06260878 .
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Nauzer Forbes
University of Calgary
Howard Guo
University of Calgary
Ashlee Kruk
University of Calgary
BMJ Open
University of Toronto
University of British Columbia
McGill University
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Forbes et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a18cf34985da83d5491cdfd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2026-119154