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Emergency Hernia Repair

O

Oulu University Hospital

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Emergency Ventral Hernia Repair
Emergency Inguinal Hernia Repair

Treatments

Procedure: Emergency hernia repair

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07314398
50/2023

Details and patient eligibility

About

Emergency hernia repairs are associated with significantly higher morbidity and mortality compared with elective hernia surgery. In Finland, approximately 500 emergency groin hernia repairs and 600 ventral hernia repairs are performed annually, but treatment practices vary widely, and high-quality evidence is lacking.

This prospective multicenter cohort study will evaluate outcomes of emergency groin and ventral hernia repairs in Finland. About 600 patients will be recruited over two years and followed for five years postoperatively. The study will collect standardized data on patient demographics, comorbidities, surgical technique, intraoperative findings, postoperative course, and long-term follow-up. Quality of life will be assessed with RAND-36, AAS, and PROMIS questionnaires.

The primary endpoint is hernia recurrence within two years after surgery. Secondary outcomes include 30- and 90-day complications, infection rates, readmissions, recovery time, and quality of life at 1, 2, and 5 years.

The results will provide robust evidence to guide clinical practice, optimize surgical techniques, and refine urgency classification and surgeon competence requirements for emergency hernia repair.

Full description

  1. Introduction and Background

    Hernia surgery is among the most common surgical procedures, the majority performed as elective operations. However, the proportion of emergency procedures is considerable, and these are associated with significantly higher morbidity and mortality compared with elective surgery.

    In Finland, approximately 500 emergency groin hernia repairs and 600 ventral hernia repairs are performed annually. Current treatment practices for emergency hernia surgery vary substantially, and scientific evidence on management and outcomes is lacking. Existing guidelines are partly outdated and largely based on expert opinion.

    The aim of this study is to provide new, scientifically robust evidence on the outcomes, complications, and postoperative quality of life following emergency hernia surgery.

  2. Study Objectives

    The primary objective is to assess the short- and long-term outcomes of different surgical techniques in emergency groin and ventral hernia repairs. Specifically, the study will evaluate:

    Surgical outcomes and complications within 30 and 90 days postoperatively

    Risk of recurrence and quality of life at 1, 2, and 5 years

    Impact of wound and mesh infections, as well as other postoperative factors, on recurrence

    Effectiveness and safety of different surgical techniques

    The results will support more evidence-based and precise recommendations on surgical methods, urgency classification, and the role of surgeon expertise.

  3. Study Design and Patient Cohort

    This is a multicenter study with a prospective patient cohort of emergency groin and ventral hernia repairs. Patients will be recruited over two years and followed up for five years postoperatively. The aim is to include as many eligible patients as possible.

    Inclusion criterion

    Emergency repair of a groin or ventral hernia

    Exclusion criteria

    Pregnancy

    Age under 18 years

    Advanced malignancy

    Inability to follow up (e.g., long travel distance or poor functional status)

    Participation in another study

    Lack of informed consent

    Estimated sample size: ~600 patients recruited across participating Finnish hospitals.

  4. Methods and Data Collection

    Data will be collected in the REDCap system at the following time points:

    Baseline (preoperative): Patient demographics (age, sex, BMI) and comorbidities

    Intraoperative: Surgical technique, procedures performed, duration of surgery

    Postoperative (hospital stay): Recovery, complications, reoperations

    Follow-up at 30 days, 90 days, 1, 2, and 5 years:

    Recurrence (clinically and with imaging if needed)

    Quality of life (RAND-36, AAS, PROMIS)

    Complications, readmissions, recovery time, sick leave

    Patients will be contacted by phone at each follow-up. If recovery is delayed, complications are suspected, or recurrence is possible, patients will be invited for further assessment at the hospital where the surgery was performed.

  5. Statistical Analysis

    The primary endpoint is hernia recurrence within two years after surgery.

    Statistical methods include:

    Kaplan-Meier analysis for comparison of surgical techniques

    Chi-square test and Fisher's exact test for categorical variables

    Student's t-test for continuous variables

    Multivariate analysis for independent risk factors

    Analyses will be conducted using IBM SPSS Statistics. A p-value < 0.05 will be considered statistically significant.

  6. Ethical Considerations and Data Protection

    The study has been approved by the Ethics Committee of the Wellbeing Services County of North Ostrobothnia. Local research permits will be obtained from each participating hospital before study initiation.

    Participation is voluntary, and written informed consent will be obtained from all patients. Clinical management will follow local treatment protocols regardless of study participation. Patient data will be stored in a pseudonymized form. The data controller is the Wellbeing Services County of North Ostrobothnia.

  7. Timeline

2024-2026: Patient recruitment and initiation of follow-up. Study start date: 1 September 2025 across all participating hospitals.

2028: Data analysis and first publication on the primary endpoint

2031: Completion of follow-up and publication of long-term outcomes

Enrollment

600 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Emergency repair of a groin or ventral hernia

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy
  • Age under 18 years
  • Advanced malignancy
  • Inability to follow up (e.g., long travel distance or poor functional status)
  • Participation in another study
  • Lack of informed consent

Trial design

600 participants in 1 patient group

Emergency ventral or inguinal hernia repair
Description:
Patients, who will have their ventral or inguinal hernia repaired in emergency surgery
Treatment:
Procedure: Emergency hernia repair

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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