| Literature DB >> 35794500 |
Norbert Kovács1,2, Dávid Németh2,3, Mária Földi1,2, Bernadette Nagy2, Stefania Bunduc2,4,5, Péter Hegyi6,7,8, Judit Bajor9, Katalin Eszter Müller2,10, Áron Vincze9, Bálint Erőss2,6,7, Szabolcs Ábrahám11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Decades of debate surround the use of intraoperative cholangiography (IOC) during cholecystectomy. To the present day, the role of IOC is controversial as regards decreasing the rate of bile duct injury (BDI). We aimed to review and analyse the available literature on the benefits of IOC during cholecystectomy.Entities:
Keywords: BDI; Bile duct injury; Cholangiography; Cholecystectomy; IOC; Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35794500 PMCID: PMC9485186 DOI: 10.1007/s00464-022-09267-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Endosc ISSN: 0930-2794 Impact factor: 3.453
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Characteristics of included studies (routine IOC vs selective IOC)
| Study | Study design | Centre(s) | Type of procedure | Comparison | Number of patients (female %, mean age ± SD) | Number of SIOC (n) | Outcomes | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkhaffaf et al. 2011 | Prospective cohort | Multicentric (4) in UK | LC | Routine IOC | 463(80%, 47.8 ± 14.8) | - | BDI, conversion rate to open surgery, LOHS | N/A |
| Selective IOC | 1159(80%, 50.2 ± 15.7) | 263 | ||||||
| Amott et al. 2005 | Quasi-randomized trial | Single centre in Australia | LC | routine IOC | 148 | - | BDI, retained stone rate, success rate of IOC, operation time | N/A |
| Selective IOC | 155 | 45 | ||||||
| Buddingh et al. 2011 | Retrospective cohort | Single centre in the Netherlands | Cholecystectomy | Routine IOC | 435 (63.9%, 53 ± 17) | - | BDI, conversion rate to open surgery, success rate of IOC, operation time | N/A |
| Selective IOC | 421(64.4%, 53 ± 16) | 25 | ||||||
| Carlson et al. 1993 | Prospective cohort | Multicentric (2) in USA | LC | Routine IOC | 164 | - | BDI, retained stone rate | A inst: 9–28 months, B inst: 16–31 months |
| Selective IOC | 155 | 21 | ||||||
| Guerra-Filho et al. 2007 | Prospective cohort | Single centre in Brazil | LC | Routine IOC | 127(73.2%, 48.8) | - | Success rate of IOC | N/A |
| Selective IOC | 127(74%, 47.9) | 71 | ||||||
| Nickkholgh et al. 2006 | Retrospective cohort | Single centre in Iran | LC | Routine IOC | 1133 | BDI, retained stone rate, success rate of IOC | N/A | |
| Selective IOC | 800 | 159 | ||||||
| Pham et al. 2016 | Retrospective cohort | Multicentric (2) in China | LC | Routine IOC | 246 (81%, 40, range: 33–57) | Retained stone rate, readmission rate, operation time | 30-day | |
| Selective IOC | 274 (76%, 44, range: 31–53) | 15 | ||||||
| Ragulin-Coyne et al. 2013 | Retrospective cohort | Multicentric (NIS) in USA | Cholecystectomy | Routine IOC | 13,025 (66.9%, 53.5) | - | BDI, LOHS | N/A |
| Selective IOC | 98,790 (66%, 52.5) | N/A | ||||||
| Snow et al. 2001 | Retrospective cohort | Multicentric (4) in USA | LC | Routine IOC | 1522 | - | BDI, retained stone rate, success rate of IOC | 11 year |
| Selective IOC | 487 | 139 |
IOC intraoperative cholangiography,LC laparoscopic cholecystectomy, BDI bile duct injury, LOHS length of hospital stay
Fig. 2Forest plot comparing risk of BDI between routine IOC and selective IOC groups (population: both types of cholecystectomy). RR: relative risk; p: P value; CI confidence interval; I-squared: I2
Fig. 3Forest plot comparing risk of BDI between routine IOC and selective IOC groups (population: laparoscopic cholecystectomy). RR: relative risk; p: P value; CI confidence interval; I-squared: I2
Fig. 4Forest plot comparing risk of MBDI between routine IOC and selective IOC groups (population: both types of cholecystectomy). RR: relative risk; p: P value; CI confidence interval; I-squared: I2
Fig. 5Forest plot comparing risk of MBDI between routine IOC and selective IOC groups (population: laparoscopic cholecystectomy). RR: relative risk; p: P value; CI confidence interval; I-squared: I2
GRADE evidence profile – Comparison: Routine vs selective IOC. Population: both type of cholecystectomy
| Certainty assessment | № of patients | Effect | Certainty | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| № of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | Routine IOC | selective IOC | Relative | Absolute | ||
| 6 | observational studies | very seriousa | not serious | seriousb | not serious | none | 48/16930 (0.3%) | 282/101812 (0.3%) | RR 0.91 (0.66 to 1.24) | 0 fewer per 1 000 (from 1 fewer to 1 more) | ⨁◯◯◯ Very low | CRITICAL |
| observational studies | very seriousa | not serious | seriousb | not serious | publication bias strongly suspectedc | 34/14938 (0.2%) | 268/100166 (0.3%) | RR 0.44 (0.11 to 1.84) | 1 fewer per 1 000 (from 2 fewer to 2 more) | ⨁◯◯◯ Very low | CRITICAL | |
CI confidence interval, RR risk ratio
aBias is likely due to the presence of confounding factors
bMost patients had acute biliary disease
cDue to the low number of articles publication bias was not assessed
GRADE evidence profile – Comparison: Routine vs selective IOC. Population: laparoscopic cholecystectomy
| Certainty assessment | № of patients | Effect | Certainty | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| № of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | Routine IOC | selective IOC | Relative | Absolute | ||
| 3 | observational studies | very seriousa | not serious | not serious | not serious | publication bias strongly suspectedb | 4/1949 (0.2%) | 10/2114 (0.5%) | RR 0.78 (0.25 to 2.41) | 1 fewer per 1 000 (from 4 fewer to 7 more) | ⨁◯◯◯ Very low | CRITICAL |
| 2 | observational studies | very seriousa | not serious | not serious | not serious | publication bias strongly suspectedb | 1/1478 (0.1%) | 3/955 (0.3%) | RR 0.39 (0.05 to 3.28) | 2 fewer per 1 000 (from 3 fewer to 7 more) | ⨁◯◯◯ Very low | CRITICAL |
| 4 | observational studies | very seriousa | very seriousc | not serious | very seriousd | publication bias strongly suspectede | 2846/3127 (91.0%) | 372/414 (89.9%) | RR 0.96 (0.86 to 1.06) | 36 fewer per 1 000 (from 126 fewer to 54 more) | ⨁◯◯◯ Very low | IMPORTANT |
| 3 | observational studies | very seriousa | very seriousc | seriousf | seriousg | publication bias strongly suspectedh | 857 | 1588 | - | WMD 14.02 min. more (6.96 fewer to 35 more) | ⨁◯◯◯ Very low | IMPORTANT |
CI confidence interval, RR risk ratio
aBias is likely due to the presence of confounding factors
bDue to the low number of articles publication bias was not assessed
cInconsistency is likely due to the presence of statistically significant heterogeneity
dConfidence intervals cross the benefit/harm line and 0−effect line
ePublication bias is likely due to funnel plot asymmetry
fIndirect population is likely due to the variable inclusion and exclusion criteria
gImprecision is likely due to the overall effect estimate lies between benefit and harm
hThe risk of publication bias was not assessed due to the low number of studies included