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Trans-septal Quilting Suturing vs Intranasal Silicone Splinting in Septoplasty

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Summary

NIH ClinicalTrials.gov registered a randomized controlled trial (NCT07537920) comparing trans-septal quilting suturing versus intranasal silicone splinting following septoplasty in patients with deviated nasal septum. The study aims to identify which post-operative technique results in fewer adverse effects. Participants will be enrolled with an estimated completion date of April 2026.

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What changed

NIH added a new clinical trial registration (NCT07537920) to ClinicalTrials.gov documenting a randomized controlled trial comparing two post-septoplasty techniques: trans-septal quilting suturing and intranasal silicone splinting. The study will evaluate adverse effects and outcomes to determine the superior approach.

Healthcare providers and clinical investigators conducting ENT or facial plastic surgery research should note this trial's enrollment criteria and interventions. Patients with deviated nasal septum undergoing septoplasty may be eligible participants. The trial registration provides a framework for evidence generation on surgical best practices in nasal reconstruction.

Archived snapshot

Apr 18, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

← ClinicalTrials.gov Studies

Trans-septal Quilting Suturing vs Intranasal Silicone Splinting in Septoplasty

N/A NCT07537920 Kind: NA Apr 17, 2026

Abstract

There is currently little data comparing intranasal silicone splinting versus trans-septal quilted suturing in terms of preventing problems following septoplasty. The purpose of this study is to compare the results of intranasal silicone splinting with trans-septal quilted suturing following septoplasty. After septoplasty, this study will give us a better procedure with fewer adverse effects. Based on the outcomes, we can then regularly use that specific approach in our general practice to treat these specific individuals in an effort to lower their morbidity

Conditions: DNS

Interventions: trans-septal quilting suturing, intranasal silicone splinting

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NIH
Published
April 17th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
NCT07537920

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Clinical investigators
Industry sector
6221 Hospitals & Health Systems
Activity scope
Medical procedures Clinical research
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Medical Devices Pharmaceuticals

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