Ze-Guo Zhuo1, Xu Shen1, Tie-Niu Song1, Zhi-Jie Xu1, Gu-Ha Alai1, Peng Yao1, Yi-Dan Lin2. 1. Department of Thoracic Surgery, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China. 2. Department of Thoracic Surgery, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China. linyidan.academy@foxmail.com.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The blood supply to the gastric conduit is thought to be the most crucial factor affecting the healing of the gastroesophageal anastomosis. By selective ligation or embolization of gastric vessels, ischemic conditioning (IC) could promote the hypertrophy and neovascularization of the remaining gastric vessels. So that it could help the stomach adapt to the decline of blood supply before esophagectomy. However, the safety and efficacy of the technique still needs to be proved. Several new studies on this topic have been published recently. We conduct this meta-analysis to update the evidence on this topic. METHODS: A logistic searching strategy was designed to find out related publications on four medical databases (PubMed, EMBASE, Medline, and Cochrane Central Register of controlled trials). The included studies were confirmed by reading the title, abstract, or full text. Based on these included studies, the comparison of postoperative outcomes between patients who received IC and those did not was made. After that, the safety and efficacy of IC were assessed. RESULTS: Fourteen studies were enrolled in the meta-analysis. The pooled analysis showed IC reduced the incidence of anastomotic leakage significantly. And both the embolization and laparoscopic ligation approach were effective. The subgroup analysis indicated the interval between IC and esophagectomy should be over two weeks before the IC worked. The IC also could decrease the anastomotic stricture rate dominantly. What's more, the IC didn't increase the mortality. CONCLUSIONS: This meta-analysis proved that ischemic conditioning is a safe intervention that could reduce anastomotic complications effectively. Future randomized controlled clinical trials are needed to provide high-level evidence on this topic.
BACKGROUND: The blood supply to the gastric conduit is thought to be the most crucial factor affecting the healing of the gastroesophageal anastomosis. By selective ligation or embolization of gastric vessels, ischemic conditioning (IC) could promote the hypertrophy and neovascularization of the remaining gastric vessels. So that it could help the stomach adapt to the decline of blood supply before esophagectomy. However, the safety and efficacy of the technique still needs to be proved. Several new studies on this topic have been published recently. We conduct this meta-analysis to update the evidence on this topic. METHODS: A logistic searching strategy was designed to find out related publications on four medical databases (PubMed, EMBASE, Medline, and Cochrane Central Register of controlled trials). The included studies were confirmed by reading the title, abstract, or full text. Based on these included studies, the comparison of postoperative outcomes between patients who received IC and those did not was made. After that, the safety and efficacy of IC were assessed. RESULTS: Fourteen studies were enrolled in the meta-analysis. The pooled analysis showed IC reduced the incidence of anastomotic leakage significantly. And both the embolization and laparoscopic ligation approach were effective. The subgroup analysis indicated the interval between IC and esophagectomy should be over two weeks before the IC worked. The IC also could decrease the anastomotic stricture rate dominantly. What's more, the IC didn't increase the mortality. CONCLUSIONS: This meta-analysis proved that ischemic conditioning is a safe intervention that could reduce anastomotic complications effectively. Future randomized controlled clinical trials are needed to provide high-level evidence on this topic.