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A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum

INTRODUCTION: Small bowel lipomas are rarely encountered benign adipose growths found within the small intestine wall or mesentery. Limited up-to-date evidence exists regarding such lipomas. We aim to aid clinical decision-making and improve patient outcomes through this comprehensive review. METHOD...

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Autores principales: Farkas, Nicholas, Wong, Joshua, Bethel, Jordan, Monib, Sherif, Frampton, Adam, Thomson, Simon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7486416/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32953101
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2020.08.028
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author Farkas, Nicholas
Wong, Joshua
Bethel, Jordan
Monib, Sherif
Frampton, Adam
Thomson, Simon
author_facet Farkas, Nicholas
Wong, Joshua
Bethel, Jordan
Monib, Sherif
Frampton, Adam
Thomson, Simon
author_sort Farkas, Nicholas
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Small bowel lipomas are rarely encountered benign adipose growths found within the small intestine wall or mesentery. Limited up-to-date evidence exists regarding such lipomas. We aim to aid clinical decision-making and improve patient outcomes through this comprehensive review. METHODOLOGY: The terms ‘small bowel,’ ‘small intestine,’ ‘jejunum’ and ‘ileum’ were combined with ‘lipoma.’ EMBASE, Medline and PubMed database searches were performed. All papers published in English from 01/01/2000-31/12/2019 were included. Simple statistical analysis (t-test, Anova) was performed. RESULTS: 142 papers yielded 147 cases (adults = 138, pediatric = 9). Male = 88, female = 59 (average age = 49.9 years). Presenting symptoms: abdominal pain = 68.7%; nausea/vomiting = 35.3%, hematochezia/GI bleeding = 33.3%; anaemia = 10.9%; abdominal distension = 12.2%; constipation = 8.9%; weight loss = 7.5%. Mean preceding symptom length = 58.1 days (symptoms >1 year excluded (n = 9)). Diagnostic imaging utilised: abdominal X-Ray = 33.3%; endoscopy = 46.3%; CT = 78.2%; ultrasound = 23.8%. 124/137 (90.5%) required definitive surgical management (laparotomy = 89, laparoscopcic = 35). 9 patients were successfully managed endoscopically. Lipoma location: ileum = 59.9%, jejunum = 32%, mesentery = 4.8%. Maximal recorded lipoma size ranged 1.2–22 cm. Mean maximum lipoma diameter and management strategy comparison: laparotomy 5.6 cm, laparoscopic = 4.4 cm, endoscopic = 3.7 cm, conservative = 4.5 cm. One-way Anova test, p value = 0.21. Average length of stay (LOS) was 7.4 days (range = 2–30). T-test p value = 0.13 when comparing management modalities and LOS. 4 complications, 0 mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Important previously undocumented points are illustrated; a clearer symptom profile, diagnostic investigations utilised, size and site of lipomas, types and effectiveness of management modalities, associated morbidity and mortality. Open surgery remains the primary management. No statistically significant difference in LOS and lipoma size is demonstrated between management strategies. Endoscopic and laparoscopic techniques may reduce utilising invasive surgery in the future as skillset and availability improve.
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spelling pubmed-74864162020-09-17 A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum Farkas, Nicholas Wong, Joshua Bethel, Jordan Monib, Sherif Frampton, Adam Thomson, Simon Ann Med Surg (Lond) Systematic Review / Meta-analysis INTRODUCTION: Small bowel lipomas are rarely encountered benign adipose growths found within the small intestine wall or mesentery. Limited up-to-date evidence exists regarding such lipomas. We aim to aid clinical decision-making and improve patient outcomes through this comprehensive review. METHODOLOGY: The terms ‘small bowel,’ ‘small intestine,’ ‘jejunum’ and ‘ileum’ were combined with ‘lipoma.’ EMBASE, Medline and PubMed database searches were performed. All papers published in English from 01/01/2000-31/12/2019 were included. Simple statistical analysis (t-test, Anova) was performed. RESULTS: 142 papers yielded 147 cases (adults = 138, pediatric = 9). Male = 88, female = 59 (average age = 49.9 years). Presenting symptoms: abdominal pain = 68.7%; nausea/vomiting = 35.3%, hematochezia/GI bleeding = 33.3%; anaemia = 10.9%; abdominal distension = 12.2%; constipation = 8.9%; weight loss = 7.5%. Mean preceding symptom length = 58.1 days (symptoms >1 year excluded (n = 9)). Diagnostic imaging utilised: abdominal X-Ray = 33.3%; endoscopy = 46.3%; CT = 78.2%; ultrasound = 23.8%. 124/137 (90.5%) required definitive surgical management (laparotomy = 89, laparoscopcic = 35). 9 patients were successfully managed endoscopically. Lipoma location: ileum = 59.9%, jejunum = 32%, mesentery = 4.8%. Maximal recorded lipoma size ranged 1.2–22 cm. Mean maximum lipoma diameter and management strategy comparison: laparotomy 5.6 cm, laparoscopic = 4.4 cm, endoscopic = 3.7 cm, conservative = 4.5 cm. One-way Anova test, p value = 0.21. Average length of stay (LOS) was 7.4 days (range = 2–30). T-test p value = 0.13 when comparing management modalities and LOS. 4 complications, 0 mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Important previously undocumented points are illustrated; a clearer symptom profile, diagnostic investigations utilised, size and site of lipomas, types and effectiveness of management modalities, associated morbidity and mortality. Open surgery remains the primary management. No statistically significant difference in LOS and lipoma size is demonstrated between management strategies. Endoscopic and laparoscopic techniques may reduce utilising invasive surgery in the future as skillset and availability improve. Elsevier 2020-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7486416/ /pubmed/32953101 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2020.08.028 Text en © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of IJS Publishing Group Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Systematic Review / Meta-analysis
Farkas, Nicholas
Wong, Joshua
Bethel, Jordan
Monib, Sherif
Frampton, Adam
Thomson, Simon
A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
title A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
title_full A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
title_fullStr A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
title_short A systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
title_sort systematic review of symptomatic small bowel lipomas of the jejunum and ileum
topic Systematic Review / Meta-analysis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7486416/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32953101
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2020.08.028
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