| Literature DB >> 33219419 |
A G Willms1, R Schwab1, M W von Websky2, F Berrevoet3, D Tartaglia4, K Sörelius5,6, R H Fortelny7,8, M Björck9, T Monchal10, F Brennfleck11, D Bulian12, C Beltzer13, C T Germer14, J F Lock15.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Definitive fascial closure is an essential treatment objective after open abdomen treatment and mitigates morbidity and mortality. There is a paucity of evidence on factors that promote or prevent definitive fascial closure.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal compartment syndrome; Abdominal trauma; Burst abdomen; Fascial closure; Hernia; NPWT; Open abdomen; Peritonitis; VAC
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33219419 PMCID: PMC8881440 DOI: 10.1007/s10029-020-02336-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hernia ISSN: 1248-9204 Impact factor: 2.920
Fig. 1Prism flow chart of patient inclusion
Patient and treatment characteristics
| Number of patients | 630 |
| Age (years) | 59.82 ± 15.9 (median: 61.62) |
| Gender (female/male) | 210 (33.3%)/420 (66.7%) |
| Body mass index (BMI) | 28.7 ± 23.9 (median: 26.12) |
| Malignancy | 141 (22.4%) |
| Diabetes | 91 (14.4%) |
| Cardiopulmonary disease | 253 (40.2%) |
| Immunosuppression | 52 (8.3%) |
| Mannheim Peritonitis Index (MPI) | 21 ± 8 (median: 22) |
| Injury Severity Score (ISS) | 25 ± 20 (median: 26) |
| Mortality | 120/630 (19%) |
| Fistula incidence | 9% |
| Length of stay before OAT (days) | 9.05 ± 15.26 (median: 4) |
| OAT after first operation yes/no | 305 (48.4%)/325 (51.6%) |
| Surgical procedures before OAT | 1 ( |
| 2 ( | |
| 3 ( | |
| 4 ( | |
| Type of incision (midline/transverse/combined) | 502 (79.7%)/56 (8.9%)/12 (1.9%) |
| Indication for previous surgery (elective/emergency) | 198 (31.4%)/419 (66.5%) |
| Intra-abdominal contamination at the initiation of OAT (yes/no) | 290 (46%)/340 (54%) |
| Sepsis at the initiation of OAT (yes/no) | 228 (36.2%)/402 (63.8%) |
| Björck’s classification at the initiation of OAT | Grade 1A—clean OA (27.9%) |
| Grade 1B—contaminated OA (21.4%) | |
| Grade 2A—clean OA developing adherence (12.0%) | |
| Grade 2B—contaminated OA developing adherence (33.1%) | |
| Grade 3—OA complicated by fistula (2.6%) | |
| Grade 4—frozen OA (2.9%) | |
| Björck’s classification at the completion of OAT | Grade 1A—clean OA (26.5%) |
| Grade 1B—contaminated OA (1.5%) | |
| Grade 2A—clean OA with adherence (51.4%) | |
| Grade 2B—contaminated OA with adherence (2.9%) | |
| Grade 3—fistula (9.7%) | |
| Grade 4—frozen abdomen (5.8%) |
OAT open abdomen treatment, OA open abdomen
Fig. 2Indications for the open abdomen (number of patients)
Fascial closure and univariate analysis of influencing factors
| Percentage of patients | Number of patients | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Complete fascial closure (per-protocol analysis) | 71 | (362/510) | |
| Complete fascial closure (intention-to-treat analysis) | 57.5 | (362/630) | |
| Range of fascial closure rates across hospital departments | 58–100 | (80/138–21/21) | < 0.001 |
| Fascial closure rates according to OA indication | 0.215 | ||
| Trauma | 80.9 | (38/47) | |
| Peritonitis | 66.2 | (157/237) | |
| Abdominal compartment syndrome | 76.8 | (73/95) | |
| Burst abdomen | 69 | (40/58) | |
| Surgical bleeding | 72.7 | (24/33) | |
| Intestinal ischemia | 90 | (09/10) | |
| Other | 70 | (21/30) | |
| Polytrauma (yes/no) | 87.5 vs. 69,9 | (28/32 vs. 334/478) | 0.033 |
| Intra-abdominal contamination (yes/no) | 66.2 vs. 75.1 | (157/237 vs. 205/273) | 0.028 |
| Björck’s classification at the initiation of OAT | < 0.001 | ||
| Grade IA | 84.2 | (80/95) | |
| Grade IB | 90.4 | (66/73) | |
| Grade IIA | 75.6 | (31/41) | |
| Grade IIB | 66.4 | (75/113) | |
| Grade III | 55.6 | (5/9) | |
| Grade IV | 50 | (5/10) | |
| Björck’s classification at the completion of OAT | < 0.001 | ||
| Grade IA | 87.6 | (127/145) | |
| Grade IB | 93.3 | (14/15) | |
| Grade IIA | 69.8 | (81/116) | |
| Grade IIB | 77.8 | (7/9) | |
| Grade III | 30 | (3/10) | |
| Grade IV | 60.4 | (9/14) | |
| Duration of OAT | < 0.001 | ||
| Short (1–2 reoperations + OAT < 1 week) | 77 | (194/252) | |
| Medium (3–6 reoperations + OAT 7–21 days) | 81 | (77/95) | |
| Long (7 or more reoperations + OAT > 21 days) | 55.9 | (90/161) | |
| VPL (yes/no) | 79.1 vs. 57.5 | (250/316 vs. 111/193) | < 0.001 |
| NPWT (yes/no) | 78.6 vs. 51.4 | (287/365 vs. 74/144) | < 0.001 |
| DCT (no/yes) | 84.8 vs. 60.8 | (184/217 vs. 175/288) | < 0.001 |
| OAT with VPL + NPWT + DCT | 85.8 vs. 61.1 | (175/204 vs. 187/306) | < 0.001 |
OAT open abdomen treatment, VPL visceral protective layer, NPWT negative-pressure wound therapy, DCT dynamic closure techniques
Results of the multivariate logistic regression analysis
| Regression coefficient (B) | Standard error | Wald | Sig | Exp(B) | 95% CI for EXP(B) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower limit | Upper limit | |||||||
| All patients ( | ||||||||
| Intra-abdominal contamination | 0.462 | 0.212 | 4.746 | 1 | 0.029 | 0.63 | 0.415 | 0.955 |
| Surgical procedures before OAT initiation | 0.302 | 0.106 | 8.022 | 1 | 0.005 | 0.74 | 0.6 | 0.911 |
| NPWT | − 0.915 | 0.24 | 14.561 | 1 | < 0.001 | 2.496 | 1.56 | 3.993 |
| DCT | − 0.988 | 0.252 | 15.437 | 1 | < 0.001 | 2.687 | 1.641 | 4.4 |
| Only patients with peritonitis ( | ||||||||
| Surgical procedures before OAT initiation | 0.434 | 0.162 | 7.161 | 1 | 0.007 | 0.648 | 0.471 | 0.89 |
| NPWT | − 1.311 | 0.351 | 13.932 | 1 | < 0.001 | 3.71 | 1.864 | 7.384 |
| DCT | − 0.819 | 0.366 | 5.005 | 1 | 0.025 | 2.269 | 1.107 | 4.65 |
| Only patients with ACS ( | ||||||||
| NPWT | − 2.293 | 0.64 | 12.831 | 1 | < 0.001 | 9.9 | 2.824 | 34.706 |
OAT open abdomen treatment, CI confidence interval, NPWT negative-pressure wound therapy, DCT dynamic closure techniques, ACS abdominal compartment syndrome
Fig. 3Open abdomen techniques (number of patients). VAWCM vacuum-assisted wound closure and mesh-mediated fascial traction, VAC vacuum-assisted closure, NPWT negative-pressure wound therapy, VPL visceral protective layer, DFS dynamic fascial sutures
Fig. 4Open abdomen treatment elements (number of patients). DCT dynamic closure techniques, NPWT negative-pressure wound therapy, VPL visceral protective layer