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Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal

BACKGROUND: Several techniques have been described for the management of fistula-in-ano, but all carry their own risks of recurrence and incontinence. We conducted a prospective study to assess type of presentation, treatment strategy and outcome over a 5-year period. METHODS: Between 1st January 20...

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Autores principales: Sileri, Pierpaolo, Cadeddu, Federica, D'Ugo, Stefano, Franceschilli, Luana, Del Vecchio Blanco, Giovanna, De Luca, Elisabetta, Calabrese, Emma, Capperucci, Sara Mara, Fiaschetti, Valeria, Milito, Giovanni, Gaspari, Achille Lucio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3235969/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22070555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-11-120
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author Sileri, Pierpaolo
Cadeddu, Federica
D'Ugo, Stefano
Franceschilli, Luana
Del Vecchio Blanco, Giovanna
De Luca, Elisabetta
Calabrese, Emma
Capperucci, Sara Mara
Fiaschetti, Valeria
Milito, Giovanni
Gaspari, Achille Lucio
author_facet Sileri, Pierpaolo
Cadeddu, Federica
D'Ugo, Stefano
Franceschilli, Luana
Del Vecchio Blanco, Giovanna
De Luca, Elisabetta
Calabrese, Emma
Capperucci, Sara Mara
Fiaschetti, Valeria
Milito, Giovanni
Gaspari, Achille Lucio
author_sort Sileri, Pierpaolo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Several techniques have been described for the management of fistula-in-ano, but all carry their own risks of recurrence and incontinence. We conducted a prospective study to assess type of presentation, treatment strategy and outcome over a 5-year period. METHODS: Between 1st January 2005 and 31st March 2011 247 patients presenting with anal fistulas were treated at the University Hospital Tor Vergata and were included in the present prospective study. Mean age was 47 years (range 16-76 years); minimum follow-up period was 6 months (mean 40, range 6-74 months). Patients were treated using 4 operative approaches: fistulotomy, fistulectomy, seton placement and rectal advancement flap. Data analyzed included: age, gender, type of fistula, operative intervention, healing rate, postoperative complications, reinterventions and recurrence. RESULTS: Etiologies of fistulas were cryptoglandular (n = 218), Crohn's disease (n = 26) and Ulcerative Colitis (n = 3). Fistulae were classified as simple -intersphincteric 57 (23%), low transphincteric 28 (11%) and complex -high transphicteric 122 (49%), suprasphincteric 2 (0.8%), extrasphinteric 2 (0.8%), recto-vaginal 7 (2.8%) Crohn 26 (10%) and UC 3 (1.2%). The most common surgical procedure was the placement of seton (62%), usually applied in case of complex fistulae and Crohn's patients. Eighty-five patients (34%) underwent fistulotomy, mainly for intersphincteric and mid/low transphincteric tracts. Crohn's patients were submitted to placement of one or more loose setons. The main treatment successfully eradicated the primary fistula tract in 151/247 patients (61%). Three cases of major incontinence (1.3%) were detected during the follow-up period; Furthermore, three patients complained minor incontinence that was successfully treated by biofeedback and permacol injection into the internal anal sphincter. CONCLUSIONS: This prospective audit demonstrates an high proportion of complex anal fistulae treated by seton placement that was the most common surgical technique adopted to treat our patients as a first line. Nevertheless, a good outcome was achieved in the majority of patients with a limited rate of faecal incontinence (6/247 = 2.4%). New technologies provide promising alternatives to traditional methods of management particularly in case of complex fistulas. There is, however, a real need for high-quality randomized control trials to evaluate the different surgical and non surgical treatment options.
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spelling pubmed-32359692011-12-13 Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal Sileri, Pierpaolo Cadeddu, Federica D'Ugo, Stefano Franceschilli, Luana Del Vecchio Blanco, Giovanna De Luca, Elisabetta Calabrese, Emma Capperucci, Sara Mara Fiaschetti, Valeria Milito, Giovanni Gaspari, Achille Lucio BMC Gastroenterol Research Article BACKGROUND: Several techniques have been described for the management of fistula-in-ano, but all carry their own risks of recurrence and incontinence. We conducted a prospective study to assess type of presentation, treatment strategy and outcome over a 5-year period. METHODS: Between 1st January 2005 and 31st March 2011 247 patients presenting with anal fistulas were treated at the University Hospital Tor Vergata and were included in the present prospective study. Mean age was 47 years (range 16-76 years); minimum follow-up period was 6 months (mean 40, range 6-74 months). Patients were treated using 4 operative approaches: fistulotomy, fistulectomy, seton placement and rectal advancement flap. Data analyzed included: age, gender, type of fistula, operative intervention, healing rate, postoperative complications, reinterventions and recurrence. RESULTS: Etiologies of fistulas were cryptoglandular (n = 218), Crohn's disease (n = 26) and Ulcerative Colitis (n = 3). Fistulae were classified as simple -intersphincteric 57 (23%), low transphincteric 28 (11%) and complex -high transphicteric 122 (49%), suprasphincteric 2 (0.8%), extrasphinteric 2 (0.8%), recto-vaginal 7 (2.8%) Crohn 26 (10%) and UC 3 (1.2%). The most common surgical procedure was the placement of seton (62%), usually applied in case of complex fistulae and Crohn's patients. Eighty-five patients (34%) underwent fistulotomy, mainly for intersphincteric and mid/low transphincteric tracts. Crohn's patients were submitted to placement of one or more loose setons. The main treatment successfully eradicated the primary fistula tract in 151/247 patients (61%). Three cases of major incontinence (1.3%) were detected during the follow-up period; Furthermore, three patients complained minor incontinence that was successfully treated by biofeedback and permacol injection into the internal anal sphincter. CONCLUSIONS: This prospective audit demonstrates an high proportion of complex anal fistulae treated by seton placement that was the most common surgical technique adopted to treat our patients as a first line. Nevertheless, a good outcome was achieved in the majority of patients with a limited rate of faecal incontinence (6/247 = 2.4%). New technologies provide promising alternatives to traditional methods of management particularly in case of complex fistulas. There is, however, a real need for high-quality randomized control trials to evaluate the different surgical and non surgical treatment options. BioMed Central 2011-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3235969/ /pubmed/22070555 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-11-120 Text en Copyright ©2011 Sileri et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sileri, Pierpaolo
Cadeddu, Federica
D'Ugo, Stefano
Franceschilli, Luana
Del Vecchio Blanco, Giovanna
De Luca, Elisabetta
Calabrese, Emma
Capperucci, Sara Mara
Fiaschetti, Valeria
Milito, Giovanni
Gaspari, Achille Lucio
Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
title Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
title_full Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
title_fullStr Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
title_full_unstemmed Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
title_short Surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
title_sort surgery for fistula-in-ano in a specialist colorectal unit: a critical appraisal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3235969/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22070555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-11-120
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