| Literature DB >> 32700102 |
Fleur E E de Vries1, Jeroen J M Claessen2, Elina M S van Hasselt-Gooijer1, Oddeke van Ruler3, Cora Jonkers4, Wanda Kuin5, Irene van Arum5, G Miriam van der Werf4, Mireille J Serlie5, Marja A Boermeester1.
Abstract
AIM: Type 2 intestinal failure (IF) is characterized by the need for longer-term parenteral nutrition (PN). During this so-called bridging-to-surgery period, morbidity and mortality rates are high. This study aimed to evaluate to what extent a multidisciplinary IF team is capable to safely guide patients towards reconstructive surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Intestinal failure type 2; bridging-to-surgery; fistula; high-output; parenteral nutrition; stoma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32700102 PMCID: PMC8203517 DOI: 10.1007/s11605-020-04741-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastrointest Surg ISSN: 1091-255X Impact factor: 3.452
Treatment principles in the bridging-to-surgery period derived from the ESCP consensus statement1
| Recommendation | Level of evidence |
|---|---|
| Type 2 IF (>28 days) should be treated in a multidisciplinary IF unit | 4 |
| Reconstructive surgery should not be undertaken for 6–12 months and until nutrition has been optimized, and preferably after a patient has had a period of time at home. A few parameters of optimizing are rising albumin levels (preferably >32 g/L), resolution of sepsis, good fluid and electrolyte balance, and stable or increasing weight. | 4 |
| Patients should be allowed to take liquids and diet as early as possible and as tolerated unless the surgeon feels that withholding oral intake may reduce peritoneal contamination and provide the best chance of spontaneous closure immediately after fistula formation | 5 |
| Specific nutrient deficiencies need to be monitored with regular measurements of magnesium, zinc, selenium, iron, vitamins D, K, B12 in those requiring prolonged nutritional support, particularly if there are difficulties with oral magnesium and phosphate supplementation with a high-output stoma/fistula. | 4 |
| High-dose loperamide, proton pump inhibitors, and codeine phosphate should be used to reduce fistula or stoma output. There is little evidence to support the routine use of somatostatin analogues or cholestyramine in the management of high output stoma or intestinal fistula. | 4 |
Baseline characteristics
| No. of patients ( | |
|---|---|
| Age in years (median, range) | 64 (26–83) |
| Gender (male:female) | 47 : 46 |
| Preadmission body mass index (BMI) (median, IQR) | 25.5 (22.6–29.2) |
| Referral | |
Internal External | 15 (16.1%) 78 (83.9%) |
| Time between last abdominal intervention and first visit (T1) in months (median, IQR) | 2 (1-5) |
| Diabetes Mellitus | 17 (18.3%) |
| Smoking | 17 (18.3%) |
| IBD | 18 (19.4%) |
| Immunosuppressive medication | 8 (8.6%) |
| Number of previous abdominal operations (median, IQR) | 4 (3–7) |
| Etiology type 2 intestinal failure | |
ECF# Anastomotic leakage Perforation iatrogenic Mesh related Perforation inflammatory / infection± Ischemic bowel Other^ EAF* after open abdomen treatment High output enterostomy Anastomotic leakage Perforation iatrogenic Perforation inflammatory/infection± Ischemic bowel Oncologic resection Radiation enteritis | 39 (41.9%) 15 (16.1%) 9 (9.7%) 5 (5.4%) 5 (5.4%) 1 (1.1%) 4 (4.2%) 15 (16.1%) 37 (39.8%) 9 (9.7%) 1 (1.1%) 7 (7.5%) 19 (20.4%) 1 (1.1%) 2 (2.2%) |
| High-output fistula or stoma | 69 (74.2%) |
| Small bowel length to enterostomy/fistula | |
< 50 cm 50–100 cm 100–150 cm 150–200 cm 200–250 cm > 250 cm | 3 (3.2%) 9 (9.7%) 16 (17.2%) 9 (9.7%) 5 (5.4%) 51 (54.8%) |
| Colon length | |
< Hemicolon in situ Ileocaecal valve in situ | 35 (37.6%) 56 (60.2%) |
| Central catheter at first visit | |
None CVC1 PICC2 Port-a-cath | 2 (2.1%) 55 (59.2%) 34 (36.6%) 2 (2.1%) |
#Enterocutaneous fistula
±Inflammatory bowel disease/pancreatitis/diverticulitis
^After open abdomen treatment/oncologic resection/unknown
*Enteroatmospheric fistula
1Central venous catheter
2Peripheral inserted central catheter
“Bridging-to-surgery” period, comparison of T1 (first visit) and T2 (pre-operative visit)
| First visit (T1)* | Pre-operative (T2)* | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome$ | 26 (28.0%) | 62 (66.7%) | <0.0001 |
| Living situation | |||
At home Hospital Rehabilitation home | 53 (57.0%) 33 (35.5%) 7 (7.5%) | 79 (84.9%) 8 (8.6%) 6 (6.5%) | < 0.0001 < 0.001 0.220 |
| Oral intake | 59 (63.4%) | 87 (93.5%) | < 0.0001 |
| Albumin > 35 g/L | 51 (54.8%) | 71 (76.3%) | < 0.0001 |
| Weight loss (kg) | 6.5 (IQR 1-12) | 3 (IQR 0-8) | < 0.0001 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 23.2 (IQR 20.5-26.4) | 24.2 (IQR 22.0-27.1) | < 0.0001 |
| Parenteral administration | |||
Patients with only PN PN administration per week (mL) Patients with only fluids Fluid administration per week (mL) Patients with PN and fluids PN administration per week (mL) Fluid administration per week (mL) | 36 (38.7%) 14000 (11944–14000) 6 (6.5%) 10500 (7000–17500) 44 (47.3%) 12250 (10500–14000) 7000 (5688–10500) | 13 (14.0%) 11760 (10500–14000) 11 (11.8%) 10500 (7000–14000) 56 (60.2%) 10500 (7000–14000) 7000 (5250–10500) | |
| Medication | |||
PPI Loperamide Somatostatin analogue Codeine | 73 (78.5%) 40 (43.0%) 15 (16.1%) 20 (21.5%) | 78 (83.9%) 48 (51.6%) 16 (17.2%) 15 (16.1%) | |
*Values in median (IQR)
$Primary outcome = living situation at home + oral intake + albumin > 35 g/L
1Compared with preadmission body weight
Fig. 1Counts of patients with low- and high-output fistula or enterostomy at T1 compared with those at T2
Adverse events during “bridging-to-surgery”
| Event | No. of patients ( |
|---|---|
| Emergency department visit | |
No Yes, Amsterdam UMC Yes, other hospitals | 62 (66.7%) 25 (26.9%) 6 (6.4%) |
| Unplanned hospitalization | |
No Yes, Amsterdam UMC Yes, other hospitals | 55 (59.1%) 25 (26.9%) 13 (14.0%) |
| Abdominal abscess drainage | 8 (8.6%) |
| Unplanned surgery | 4 (4.3%) |
Catheter-related complications Infection Thrombosis | 18 (19.4) 16* 2^ |
*14 with a central venous catheter and 2 with a PICC line
^1 patients with a central venous catheter and 1 patient with a PICC
Operative details
| No. of patients ( | |
|---|---|
| Number of anastomoses (median, range) | 1 (0–4) |
| Resection of one or more enteric fistulas | 59 (63.4%) |
| Restoration of continuity | 59 (63.4%) |
| Removal of synthetic mesh | 9 (9.7%) |
Component separation technique performed Unilateral Bilateral | 45 (48.4%) 6 (13.3%) 39 (86.7%) |
| Primary fascial closure achieved | 81 (87.1%) |
The use of IPOM biologic mesh Reinforcement Bridging | 49 (52.7%) 37 (75.5%) 12 (24.5%) |
| Stoma takedown | 37* (90.2%) |
Values in parentheses are percentages unless indicated otherwise
IPOM, intra-peritoneal onlay mesh
^of 41 with enterostomy
Postoperative outcomes
| No. of patients ( | |
|---|---|
| Time between first contact (referral) and reconstructive surgery in months (median, IQR) | 5 (4–7.5) |
| Time between last abdominal intervention and reconstructive surgery in months (median, IQR) | 9 (7–11) |
30-day mortality In-hospital mortality | 2 (2.2%) 6 (6.5%) |
| Unplanned reoperation after reconstructive surgery for type 2 intestinal failure < 30 days | 6 (6.5%) |
| Clavien–Dindo classification grade 3–4 complications | 41 (44.1%) |
| Postoperative fistulas (all recurrent) | 5 (5.4%) |
| Unplanned hospital readmission < 30 days after discharge | 11 (11.8%) |
| Intravenous supplementation dependency after 2-year follow-up | |
None PN Fluid PN + fluid | 80 (86.0%) 5 (5.4%) 1 (1.1%) 7 (7.5%) |
| Reason postoperative TPN/fluid administration§ | |
Unable to discontinue PN/fluid Chronic PN dependence Chronic fluid dependence Died before discontinuation Not completed follow-up (postoperative period < 2 years) | 2 (2.2%) 1 (1.1%) 8 (8.6%) 2 (15.4%) |
Long-term mortality Days after reconstructive surgery (median, IQR) | 11 (11.8%) 246 (46–525) |
§n = 13
Univariate analysis of risk factors for ≥ grade 3 Clavien-Dindo complications and in-hospital mortality
| Risk factors | Complications CD grade ≥ 3 | In-hospital mortality | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < CD3 | ≥ CD3 | Alive | Death | |||
| Sex | 0.537 | 0.435 | ||||
Female Male | 26 26 | 20 21 | 42 45 | 4 2 | ||
| External referral | 1.00 | 0.585 | ||||
Yes No | 8 44 | 7 34 | 15 72 | 6 0 | ||
| Diabetes | 0.794 | 0.588 | ||||
Yes No | 9 43 | 8 33 | 17 70 | 0 6 | ||
| Active smoking | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||||
Yes No | 7 45 | 6 35 | 75 12 | 1 5 | ||
| Etiology fistula | 0.297 | 0.696 | ||||
Yes No | 27 25 | 26 15 | 49 38 | 4 2 | ||
| IBD | 0.186 | 0.592 | ||||
Yes No | 13 39 | 5 36 | 18 69 | 0 6 | ||
| Immunosuppression | 0.459 | 1.00 | ||||
Yes No | 6 46 | 2 39 | 6 79 | 0 6 | ||
| Living situation at home at T2 | 0.144 | 0.221 | ||||
Yes No | 47 5 | 32 9 | 75 12 | 4 2 | ||
| Oral intake at T2 | 0.400 | 0.388 | ||||
Yes No | 50 2 | 37 4 | 82 5 | 5 1 | ||
| Weight loss > 10% still present at T2 | 0.341 | |||||
Yes No | 11 40 | 13 28 | 20 66 | 4 2 | ||
| High output at T2 | 0.529 | 0.205 | ||||
Yes No | 24 26 | 23 18 | 42 43 | 5 1 | ||
| Albumin< 35 g/L at T2 | 0.597 | |||||
Yes No | 5 44 | 13 27 | 4 67 | 2 4 | ||
Italicized numbers are significant p values