Delayed primary closure (DPC) of the skin and subcutaneous tissues following complex, contaminated abdominal wall reconstruction (AWR): a propensity-matched study

被引:13
作者
Ayuso, Sullivan A. [1 ]
Elhage, Sharbel A. [1 ]
Aladegbami, Bola G. [1 ]
Kao, Angela M. [1 ]
Kercher, Kent W. [1 ]
Colavita, Paul D. [1 ]
Augenstein, Vedra A. [1 ]
Heniford, B. Todd [1 ]
机构
[1] Carolinas Med Ctr, Dept Surg, Gastrointestinal & Minimally Invas Surg, 1025 Morehead Med Dr Suite 300, Charlotte, NC 28204 USA
来源
SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES | 2022年 / 36卷 / 03期
关键词
Delayed primary closure; Contaminated; Hernia; Abdominal wall reconstruction; Complication; Surgical site occurrence; Infection; Negative pressure wound therapy; VENTRAL HERNIA REPAIR; SURGICAL SITE INFECTION; PRESSURE WOUND THERAPY; CAROLINAS EQUATION; RECURRENCE; OUTCOMES; DEFECTS; SCORE; COST; CARE;
D O I
10.1007/s00464-021-08485-z
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Wound complications following abdominal wall reconstruction (AWR) in a contaminated setting are common and significantly increase the risk of hernia recurrence. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of short-term negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) followed by operative delayed primary closure (DPC) of the skin and subcutaneous tissue after AWR in a contaminated setting. Methods A prospective institutional hernia database was queried for patients who underwent NPWT-assisted DPC after contaminated AWR between 2008 and 2020. Primary outcomes included wound complication rate and reopening of the incision. A non-DPC group was created using propensity-matching. Standard descriptive statistics were used, and a univariate analysis was performed between the DPC and non-DPC groups. Results In total, 110 patients underwent DPC following AWR. The hernias were on average large (188 +/- 133.6 cm(2)), often recurrent (81.5%), and 60.5% required a components separation. All patients had CDC Class 3 (14.5%) or 4 (85.5%) wounds and biologic mesh placed. Using CeDAR, the wound complication rate was estimated to be 66.3%. Postoperatively, 26.4% patients developed a wound complication, but only 5.5% patients required reopening of the wound. The rate of recurrence was 5.5% with mean follow-up of 22.6 +/- 27.1 months. After propensity-matching, there were 73 patients each in the DPC and non-DPC groups. DPC patients had fewer overall wound complications (23.0% vs 43.9%, p = 0.02). While 4.1% of the DPC group required reopening of the incision, 20.5% of patients in the non-DPC required reopening of the incision (p = 0.005) with an average time to healing of 150 days. Hernia recurrence remained low overall (2.7% vs 5.4%, p = 0.17). Conclusions DPC can be performed with a high rate of success in complex, contaminated AWR patients by reducing the rate of wound complications and avoiding prolonged healing times. In patients undergoing AWR in a contaminated setting, a NPWT-assisted DPC should be considered.
引用
收藏
页码:2169 / 2177
页数:9
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   CeDAR: Carolinas Equation for Determining Associated Risks [J].
Augenstein, Vedra A. ;
Colavita, Paul D. ;
Wormer, Blair A. ;
Walters, Amanda L. ;
Bradley, Joel F. ;
Lincourt, Amy E. ;
Horton, James ;
Heniford, B. Todd .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2015, 221 (04) :S65-S66
[2]   WOUND INFECTIONS FOLLOWING POTENTIALLY CONTAMINATED OPERATIONS - EFFECT OF DELAYED PRIMARY CLOSURE OF SKIN AND SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE [J].
BERNARD, HR ;
COLE, WR .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1963, 184 (04) :290-&
[3]   Systemic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Clinical Trials Comparing Primary vs Delayed Primary Skin Closure in Contaminated and Dirty Abdominal Incisions [J].
Bhangu, Aneel ;
Singh, Prashant ;
Lundy, Jonathan ;
Bowley, Douglas M. .
JAMA SURGERY, 2013, 148 (08) :779-786
[4]   Prophylactic Single-use Negative Pressure Dressing in Closed Surgical Wounds After Incisional Hernia Repair A Randomized, Controlled Trial [J].
Bueno-Lledo, Jose ;
Franco-Bernal, Ascension ;
Garcia-Voz-Mediano, Maria Teresa ;
Torregrosa-Gallud, Antonio ;
Bonafe, Santiago .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2021, 273 (06) :1081-1086
[5]  
CDC Oid Ncezid DHQP, 2020, 9 SURG SITE INFECT S
[6]   Prospective randomized trial of two wound management strategies for dirty abdominal wounds [J].
Cohn, SM ;
Giannotti, G ;
Ong, AW ;
Varela, JE ;
Shatz, DV ;
McKenney, MG ;
Sleeman, D ;
Ginzburg, E ;
Augenstein, JS ;
Byers, PM ;
Sands, LR ;
Hellinger, MD ;
Namias, N .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2001, 233 (03) :409-413
[7]   The cost of preventable comorbidities on wound complications in open ventral hernia repair [J].
Cox, Tiffany C. ;
Blair, Laurel J. ;
Huntington, Ciara R. ;
Colavita, Paul D. ;
Prasad, Tanushree ;
Lincourt, Amy E. ;
Heniford, B. Todd ;
Augenstein, Vedra A. .
JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH, 2016, 206 (01) :214-222
[8]   Closed incision prophylactic negative pressure wound therapy in patients undergoing major complex abdominal wall repair [J].
de Vries, F. E. E. ;
Atema, J. J. ;
Lapid, O. ;
Obdeijn, M. C. ;
Boermeester, M. A. .
HERNIA, 2017, 21 (04) :583-589
[9]   Image-guided botulinum toxin injection in the lateral abdominal wall prior to abdominal wall reconstruction surgery: review of techniques and results [J].
Deerenberg, Eva B. ;
Elhage, Sharbel A. ;
Raible, Robert J. ;
Shao, Jenny M. ;
Augenstein, Vedra A. ;
Heniford, B. Todd ;
Lopez, Robert .
SKELETAL RADIOLOGY, 2021, 50 (01) :1-7
[10]   Management Strategy for Dirty Abdominal Incisions: Primary or Delayed Primary Closure? A Randomized Trial [J].
Duttaroy, Dipesh D. ;
Jitendra, Jagtap ;
Duttaroy, Bithika ;
Bansal, Ujjwal ;
Dhameja, Prarthna ;
Patel, Gunjan ;
Modi, Nikhil .
SURGICAL INFECTIONS, 2009, 10 (02) :129-136