2013-10-19
Burden of adhesions in abdominal and pelvic surgery: Systematic review and met-analysis
Publication
Publication
BMJ (Online) , Volume 347 - Issue 7929
Abstract
Objective To estimate the disease burden of the most important
complications of postoperative abdominal adhesions: small bowel
obstruction, difficulties at reoperation, infertility, and chronic pain.
Design Systematic review and meta-analyses.
Data sources Searches of PubMed, Embase, and Central, from January
1990 to December 2012, without restrictions to publication status or
language.
Study selection All types of studies reporting on the incidence of
adhesion related complications were considered.
Data extraction and analysis The primary outcome was the incidence
of adhesive small bowel obstruction in patients with a history of
abdominal surgery. Secondary outcomes were the incidence of small
bowel obstruction by any cause, difference in operative time, enterotomy
during adhesiolysis, and pregnancy rate after abdominal surgery.
Subgroup and sensitivity analyses were done to study the robustness
of the results. A random effects model was used to account for
heterogeneity between studies.
Results We identified 196 eligible papers. Heterogeneity was
considerable for almost all meta-analyses. The origin of heterogeneity
could not be explained by study design, study quality, publication date,
anatomical site of operation, or operative technique. The incidence of
small bowel obstruction by any cause after abdominal surgery was 9%
(95% confidence interval 7% to 10%; I2=99%). the incidence of adhesive
small bowel obstruction was 2% (2% to 3%; I2=93%); presence of
adhesions was generally confirmed by emergent reoperation. In patients
with a known cause of small bowel obstruction, adhesions were the
single most common cause (56%, 49% to 64%; I2=96%). Operative time
was prolonged by 15 minutes (95% confidence interval 9.3 to 21.1
minutes; I2=85%) in patients with previous surgery. Use of adhesiolysis
resulted in a 6% (4% to 8%; I2=89%) incidence of iatrogenic bowel injury.
The pregnancy rate after colorectal surgery in patients with inflammatory
bowel disease was 50% (37% to 63%; I2=94%), which was significantly
lower than the pregnancy rate in medically treated patients (82%, 70%
to 94%; I2=97%).
Conclusions This review provides detailed and systematically analysed
knowledge of the disease burden of adhesions. Complications of
postoperative adhesion formation are frequent, have a large negative
effect on patients’ health, and increase workload in clinical practice. The
quantitative effects should be interpreted with caution owing to large
heterogeneity.
Registration The review protocol was registered through PROSPERO
(CRD42012003180).
Additional Metadata | |
---|---|
doi.org/10.1136/bmj.f5588, hdl.handle.net/1765/73894 | |
BMJ (Online) | |
Organisation | Department of Neuroscience |
Richard, P., Issa, Y., van Santbrink, E., Kannekens-Bouvy, N., Kruitwagen, R., Jeekel, H., … van Goor, H. (2013). Burden of adhesions in abdominal and pelvic surgery: Systematic review and met-analysis. BMJ (Online), 347(7929). doi:10.1136/bmj.f5588 |