| Literature DB >> 33945574 |
Juntao Feng1, Xiaoli Jiang1, Zhifu Zhi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical site infections (SSIs) are common postoperative complications. Whether the use of staples or sutures makes a difference in abdominal surgery's infection rate remains elusive.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33945574 PMCID: PMC8096075 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The PRISMA flow chart for the literature search.
Main characteristics of the eligible studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Study /Country | Average age (suture/ staple) | Population (suture/staple) | Closure material | Operations | Time to removal (days) | Follow up | Main relevant outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kazuhiro Imamura 2016/Japan | 72/73 | 399 (198/201) | 4–0 polydioxan-one sutures, staples | elective or emergency upper or lower gastrointestinal, hepatobiliary and pancreatic (HBP), or vascular surgery | NG | 30d | superficial SSI |
| Toshimasa Tsujinaka 2013/Japan | 68/68 | 1072 (562/518) | 3–0 or 4-0polydio-xanone sutures, staples | elective upper or lower gastrointestinal surgery, | NG | 30d and 6 months | superficial SSI |
| Lindsay M 2017/USA | 57/58 | 163 (79/84) | 4–0 absorbable sutures, staples | gynecologic surgery | 10–14 | 30d and 8weeks | wound infection |
| S.Kobayashi 2015/Japan | 65/67 | 1232 (620/612) | 4–0 or 5–0 absorbable sutures, staples | elective colorectal cancer surgery | NG | 30d | SSI |
| Elisabeth Maurer 2019/German | 66/61 | 280 (141/139) | 4–0 absorbable sutures, staples | elective gastrointestinal surgery | 10 | 30d | Superficial SSI |
| Joshua Agilinko 2019/United Kingdom | 67/69 | 218 (134/84) | non-absor-bable sutures, staples | elective colorectal surgery | NG | 6 weeks and 3 months | wound infection |
| I.R.Pickford 1983/United Kingdom | NG | 341 (182/159) | nylon sutures, steel clips | elective and emergency abdominal surgery | NG | NG | wound infection |
Note
* CDC standard
† WHO standard
‡ not specify.
Abbreviation: SSI surgical site infection; NG not given.
Fig 2Forest plot of the pooled outcomes of (A) SSIs (B) SSIs in gastrointestinal surgery (C) Wound dehiscence in selected studies comparing staples to subcuticular suture for skin closure after abdominal surgery.
Abbreviations: SSIs, surgical site infection; CI, confidence interval; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel.
Operating time reported in selected studies comparing staples with subcuticular sutures for skin closure after abdominal surgery.
| Study | Mean time taken to close skin (min, range) | Estimated time saved by staples (min) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| staples | suture | ||
| Elisabeth Maurer | 1.3(0.9–1.8) | 7.4(5.3–9.7) | 6.1 |
| Lindsay M | 3(2–4) | 11(9–15) | 8 |
| S. Kobayashi | 1(0.5–25) | 6.5(0.5–30) | 5.5 |
Qualitative data of outcomes of selected studies comparing staples with subcuticular sutures in the postoperative cosmesis and patient satisfaction.
| Study | Patient satisfaction | Cosmesis |
|---|---|---|
| Lindsay M | equivalent | suture superior |
| S. Kobayashi | suture superior | equivalent |
| Joshua Agilinko | suture superior | suture superior |
| Conclusion | suture superior | suture superior |
Fig 3Risk of bias.