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Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis

AIMS: A prospective clinical audit of all patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery with the intention of primary colonic left-sided intracorporeal stapled anastomosis to identify the rate of anastomotic leaks on an intention to treat basis with or without defunctioning stoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS:...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Goriainov, Vitali, Miles, Andrew J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2883824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20585487
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-9941.62527
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author Goriainov, Vitali
Miles, Andrew J
author_facet Goriainov, Vitali
Miles, Andrew J
author_sort Goriainov, Vitali
collection PubMed
description AIMS: A prospective clinical audit of all patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery with the intention of primary colonic left-sided intracorporeal stapled anastomosis to identify the rate of anastomotic leaks on an intention to treat basis with or without defunctioning stoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All patients undergoing laparoscopic colorectal surgery resulting in left-sided stapled anastomosis were included with no selection criteria applied. All operations were conducted by the same surgical team and the same preparation and intraoperative methods were used. The factors analyzed for this audit were patient demographics (age and sex), indication for operation, procedure performed, height of anastomosis, leak rate and the outcome, inpatient stay, mortality, rate of defunctioning stomas, and rate of conversion to open procedure. Results for anastomotic leakage were compared with known results from the Wessex Colorectal Audit for open colorectal surgery. RESULTS: A total of 69 patients (43 females, 26 males; median age 69 years, range 19 - 86 years) underwent colonic procedures with left-sided intracorporeal stapled anastomoses. Of these, 14 patients underwent reversal of Hartmann's, 42 – Anterior Resection, 11 – Sigmoid Colectomy, 2 – Left Hemicolectomy. Excluding reversals of Hartmann's, 29 operations were performed for malignant and 26 for benign disease. Five patients were defunctioned, and 3 were subsequently reversed. The median height of anastomosis was 12 cm, range 4 – 18 cm from anal verge as measured either intra-operatively, or by rigid sigmoidoscopy post-operatively. Four cases were converted to open surgery. There was 1 post-operative death within 30 days. There was 1 anastomotic leak (the patient that died), and 1 patient developed a colo-vesical fistula. Median post-operative stay was 7 days, range 2–19. CONCLUSION: This clinical audit confirms that the anastomotic leak rate for left-sided colorectal stapled anastomosis is no worse than that for open surgery. Therefore the decision making process for defunctioning stoma should be guided by the same principles as open surgery.
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spelling pubmed-28838242010-06-28 Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis Goriainov, Vitali Miles, Andrew J J Minim Access Surg Original Article AIMS: A prospective clinical audit of all patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery with the intention of primary colonic left-sided intracorporeal stapled anastomosis to identify the rate of anastomotic leaks on an intention to treat basis with or without defunctioning stoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All patients undergoing laparoscopic colorectal surgery resulting in left-sided stapled anastomosis were included with no selection criteria applied. All operations were conducted by the same surgical team and the same preparation and intraoperative methods were used. The factors analyzed for this audit were patient demographics (age and sex), indication for operation, procedure performed, height of anastomosis, leak rate and the outcome, inpatient stay, mortality, rate of defunctioning stomas, and rate of conversion to open procedure. Results for anastomotic leakage were compared with known results from the Wessex Colorectal Audit for open colorectal surgery. RESULTS: A total of 69 patients (43 females, 26 males; median age 69 years, range 19 - 86 years) underwent colonic procedures with left-sided intracorporeal stapled anastomoses. Of these, 14 patients underwent reversal of Hartmann's, 42 – Anterior Resection, 11 – Sigmoid Colectomy, 2 – Left Hemicolectomy. Excluding reversals of Hartmann's, 29 operations were performed for malignant and 26 for benign disease. Five patients were defunctioned, and 3 were subsequently reversed. The median height of anastomosis was 12 cm, range 4 – 18 cm from anal verge as measured either intra-operatively, or by rigid sigmoidoscopy post-operatively. Four cases were converted to open surgery. There was 1 post-operative death within 30 days. There was 1 anastomotic leak (the patient that died), and 1 patient developed a colo-vesical fistula. Median post-operative stay was 7 days, range 2–19. CONCLUSION: This clinical audit confirms that the anastomotic leak rate for left-sided colorectal stapled anastomosis is no worse than that for open surgery. Therefore the decision making process for defunctioning stoma should be guided by the same principles as open surgery. Medknow Publications 2010 /pmc/articles/PMC2883824/ /pubmed/20585487 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-9941.62527 Text en © Journal of Minimal Access Surgery http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Goriainov, Vitali
Miles, Andrew J
Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
title Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
title_full Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
title_fullStr Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
title_full_unstemmed Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
title_short Anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
title_sort anastomotic leak rate and outcome for laparoscopic intra-corporeal stapled anastomosis
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2883824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20585487
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-9941.62527
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