| Literature DB >> 35928547 |
Abstract
Purpose: Several guidelines have been published in recent years to guide the clinician in ventral hernia repair. This review distils this advice, critically assesses their evidence base, and proposes avenues for future study.Entities:
Keywords: incisional hernia; laparoscopic hernia repair; robotic hernia repair; ventral hernia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35928547 PMCID: PMC9345681 DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1749428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg J (N Y) ISSN: 2378-5128
Definitions of VHs, set out by EHS 2
| Umbilical hernia | Primary VH with its center at the umbilicus |
| Epigastric hernia | Primary VH close to the midline with its center above the umbilicus |
| Incisional hernia | VH that developed after surgical trauma to the abdominal wall, including recurrences after repair of primary VHs |
| Small VH | VH with fascia defect < 1cm |
| Medium-sized VH | VH with fascia defect 1–4 cm |
| Large VH | VH with fascia defect >4 cm |
Abbreviation: EHS, European Hernia Society; VHs, ventral hernias.
Features of CeDAR equation and mFI. The OR for surgical site infection in the original CeDAR study are included
| CeDAR equation | mFI |
|---|---|
| Tobacco use (OR: 2.17) | Diabetes mellitus |
| Previous ventral hernia repair (OR: 2.64) | Partially/totally dependent |
| Uncontrolled diabetes (OR: 2.01) | COPD/preoperative pneumonia |
| Presence of stoma (OR: 2.65) | Congestive cardiac failure |
| BMI > 26 kg/m 2 (1.08 per unit BMI) | History of myocardial infarction |
| Presence of active infection (OR: 2.07) | History of angina/PCI |
| Hypertension | |
| Peripheral vascular disease | |
| Impaired sensorium | |
| History of TIA/CVA | |
| History of CVA with neurological deficit |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; CeDAR, Carolinas Equation for Determining Associated Risks; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; mFI, modified frailty index; OR, odds ratio; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; TIA, transient ischemic attack.
Key studies assessing biosynthetic and biologic mesh outcomes
| Reference | Type of study | Sample size | Intervention | Comparison | Follow-up (mo) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Sahoo et al 2017
| Retrospective cohort study | 469 | Biosynthetic mesh | Synthetic mesh | 1 |
Biosynthetic mesh associated with increased surgical site infection (
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Renard et al 2020
| Retrospective cohort study | 81 | Biosynthetic mesh (Vicryl) | Biologic mesh (Strattice) | 36 |
Biosynthetic mesh associated with increased early (
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Bondre et al 2016
| Retrospective cohort study | 761 | Biologic mesh | Synthetic mesh | 15 |
Biologic mesh associated with nonsignificant reduction in infection complication (15.1 vs. 17.8%,
|
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Lee et al 2014
| Systematic review | 1,304 | Biologic mesh | Synthetic mesh | 23.2 | In clean contaminated cases, biologic mesh associated with increased wound infection rates (31.6%, [14.5–48.7%] vs. 6.4% [3.4–9.4%]) with similar recurrence rates. In contaminated cases, biologic mesh associated with increased recurrence (27.2% (9.5–44.9%) vs. 3.2% (0.0–11.0%) with similar wound infection rates |
|
Miserez et al 2010
| RCT (prematurely closed) | 257 | Noncross linked biologic mesh (Surgisis Gold) | Synthetic mesh | 12 | Biologic mesh associated with higher recurrence across all study arms (laparoscopic 19 vs. 5%; open (11 vs. 3%) in elective VHR |
|
Buell et al 2017
| Retrospective cohort study | 73 | Biosynthetic mesh (P4HB) | Biologic mesh (porcine cadaveric) | – |
Biosynthetic mesh associated with reduced complication (
|
Abbreviations: RCT, randomized controlled trial; VHR, ventral hernia repair.
Planes for mesh placement in ventral hernia surgery, adapted from ref. 31
| Plane | Anterior relation | Posterior relation |
|---|---|---|
| Onlay | Subcutaneous tissue | Anterior rectus sheath and external oblique |
| Inlay | Mesh attached to edges of hernia defect | |
| Retrorectus | Rectus abdominis muscle | Posterior rectus sheath |
| Preperitoneal | Transversalis fascia | Peritoneum |
| Intraperitoneal | Peritoneum | Abdominal cavity |
Description of component separation techniques
| Technique | Description |
|---|---|
| OACS |
Subcutaneous adipose tissue is dissected from the anterior rectus sheath to beyond the linea semilunaris. External oblique is incised along its length and dissected from internal oblique. Rectus abdominis is also separated from the posterior rectus sheath
|
| p-OACS |
Subcutaneous adipose tissue is dissected from the anterior rectus sheath to beyond linea semilunaris at two distinct sites above and below the umbilicus. These two sites are then joined to create a tunnel over external oblique. The release of external oblique is completed as per the original OACS
|
| e-CST |
Balloon dissection is used to create a space between external oblique and the subcutaneous adipose tissue. Two further working ports are inserted into this space to incise external oblique and then free it from internal oblique
|
| mi-CST |
Optical port entry is used to insert a port deep to external oblique. The space between external oblique and internal oblique is developed by carbon dioxide insufflation. Working ports are then inserted and the procedure is completed as per e-CST
|
| TAR |
Retrorectus space is developed to linea semilunaris. The posterior rectus sheath is incised medial to linea semilunaris to reach transversus abdominis. Transversus abdominis is incised along its length to reach the potential space between transversus fascia posteriorly and transversus abdominis anteriorly. This space is developed laterally
|
Abbreviations: e-CST, endoscopic anterior component separation; mi-CST, minimally invasive anterior component separation; OACS, open anterior component separation; p-OACS, perforator sparing open anterior component separation; TAR, transversus abdominis release.
Relative contraindications to laparoscopic repair of ventral hernia, as per SAGES guidance 5
| Significant adhesions |
| Recurrence hernia |
| Defect > 10 cm |
| Unusual location (e.g., subxiphoid, suprapubic) |
| Loss of domain |
| Presence of skin graft |
| Small defect: sac size ratio |
| Presence of enterocutaneous fistula |
| Required removal of large mesh |
Abbreviations: IEHS, International Endohernia Society; SAGES, Society of Gastro-intestinal Endoscopic Surgeons.
IEHS advises a greater defect size of > 15 cm as a relative contraindication. 3
Summary of key studies evaluating different techniques of laparoscopic mesh fixation in ventral hernia repair
| Reference | Type of study | Sample size | Intervention | Comparison | Mean follow-up (mo) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Reynvoet et al 2014
| Meta-analysis | 4,300 | Sutures + tacks | Tacks alone; sutures alone | 29.1 | No significant difference in recurrence (sutures + tacks 2.5% (1.3–3.7%); tacks 3.4% (2.4–4.5%); sutures 0.9% (0–1.7%) or pain between different techniques |
|
Baker et al 2017
| Meta-analysis | 6,553 | Sutures | Absorbable tacks; absorbable tacks + sutures; permanent tacks; permanent tacks + sutures | 22 | The crude recurrence rates were as follows: absorbable tacks + sutures 0.7%; sutures 1.5%; permanent tacks + sutures 6.0%; permanent tacks 7.7%; absorbable tacks 17.5%. Statistical significance was not achieved in these differences |
|
Brill and Turner 2011
| Systematic review | 8,465 | Sutures ± tacks | Sutures alone; tacks alone | 30.1 | No significant difference in hernia recurrence or prolonged postoperative pain. Sutures associated with significantly higher SSI |
|
Ahmed et al 2018
| Meta-analysis | 466 | Tacks | Suture | 16.1 | No significant difference in postoperative pain at 4–6 weeks (MD: 0.18; 95% CI: −0.48–0.85), chronic pain (OR: 1.24 [0.65–2.38]) or recurrence (OR: 1.11 [0.34–3.62]), although operative time was significantly lower with tack fixation (MD: −19.25 [−27.98–−10.51]) |
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Sajid et al 2013
| Meta-analysis | 207 | Tacks | Suture | 10.6 | No significant difference in recurrence (OR: 1.54 (0.38–6.27). Tacks associated with reduced operative time (MD: −23.65 [−31.06–−16.25]) and 4–6 weeks postoperative pain (MD: −0.69 [−1.16–−0.23]) |
|
Khan et al 2018
| Meta-analysis | 1,149 | Absorbable tacks | Nonabsorbable tacks | 30 | No difference in recurrence (RD: 0.03 [−0.04–0.09]) or chronic pain (OR: 0.91 [0.62–1.33]) |
|
Eriksen et al 2011
| RCT | 40 | Fibrin sealant | Titanium tacks | 1 |
Fibrin sealant associated with reduced acute postoperative pain on days 0–2 (
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Eriksen et al 2013
| RCT | 40 | Fibrin sealant | Titanium tacks | 12 |
Fibrin sealant associated with higher recurrence rates (26 vs. 6%,
|
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Stirler et al 2017
| Prospective cohort study | 80 | Absorbable tacks | Titanium tacks | 60.5 |
Early postoperative pain was significantly lower with absorbable tacks at 6 (
|
Abbreviations: CI confidence interval; MD, mean difference; OR, odds ratio; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RD, risk difference; SSI, surgical site infection.
Summary of key studies evaluating fascia defect closure versus defect nonclosure during laparoscopic ventral hernia repair
| Reference | Type of study | Sample size | Intervention | Comparison | Mean follow-up (mo) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Nguyen et al 2014
| Systematic review | 393 | Defect closure | Defect nonclosure | 20 | Defect closure results in reduced recurrence (0–5.7 vs. 4.8–16.7%) and seroma rates (5.6–11.4 vs. 4.3–27.8%) |
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Tandon et al 2016
| Meta-analysis | 3,638 | Defect closure | Defect nonclosure | 34.8 |
Defect closure was associated with reduced adverse events (RR: 0.25,
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Gonzalez et al 2014
| Retrospective cohort study | 134 | Defect closure | Defect nonclosure | 19.4 |
Defect closure was associated with increased operative time (
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Lambrecht et al 2015
| Combined prospective and retrospective cohort study | 194 | Defect closure | Defect nonclosure | 32.5 | Defect closure was associated in increased complication rate (OR: 3.42, 95% CI: 1.25–9.33), with no difference in seroma, pain at 2 months, pseudorecurrence or true recurrence |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio; RR, risk ratio.
Novel robotic VHR techniques and their more traditional equivalents 3
| Robotic technique | Equivalent open/laparoscopic technique |
|---|---|
| Robotic IPOM | Laparoscopic intraperitoneal onlay mesh repair |
| Robotic TAPP | Laparoscopic transabdominal preperitoneal mesh repair |
| Robotic VHR ± robotic TAR | Open retrorectus mesh repair ± transversus abdominis release |
Abbreviations: IPOM, intraperitoneal onlay mesh; TAPP, transabdominal preperitoneal; TAR, transversus abdominis release; VHR, ventral hernia repair.
Summary of key studies of robotic VHR
| Reference | Type of study | Sample size | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Gonzalez et al 2014
| Retrospective cohort study | 134 | Robotic IPOM-plus | Laparoscopic IPOM |
Robotic IPOM-plus associated with nonsignificant reduction in recurrence (
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Kennedy et al 2018
| Retrospective cohort study | 63 | Robotic TAPP | Robotic IPOM | Robotic TAPP associated with reduction in complications without significant difference in operative time compared to robotic IPOM |
|
Carbonell et al 2018
| Retrospective cohort study | 333 | Robotic RVHR | Open RVHR |
Robotic RVHR associated with reduced length of stay (
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Bittner et al 2017
| Retrospective cohort study | 102 | Robotic TAR | Open TAR |
Robotic TAR associated with significant reduction in length of stay (6 days (5.9–8.3 vs. 3 days [3.2–4.3]) but increased operative time (
|
Abbreviations: IPOM, intraperitoneal onlay mesh; RVHR, retromuscular ventral hernia repair; TAPP, transabdominal preperitoneal; TAR, transversus abdominis release.
Key studies assessing use of mesh in emergency VHR (excluding contaminated cases)
| Reference | Type of study | Sample size | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Haskins et al 2016
| Retrospective cohort study | 2,449, emergency VHR | Mesh repair | Suture repair | Mesh repair was not associated with increased wound-related or additional 30-day morbidity or mortality |
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Nieuwenhuizen et al 2011
| Retrospective cohort study | 203, emergency groin and VHRs | Mesh repair | Suture repair | Mesh repair was not associated with increased wound complications relative to suture repair |
|
Choi et al 2012
| Retrospective cohort study | 33,832, clean-contaminated and contaminated VHR (elective and emergency) | Mesh repair | Suture repair | Mesh repair was associated with increased complications relative to nonmesh repair in clean-contaminated cases (OR: 3.56 vs. 2.52) |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; VHR, ventral hernia repair.