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Despite of technological advances in surgery, incisional hernia and bowel obstruction remain frequent surgical complications. To date, the relationship between these two types of surgery and the occurrence of incisional hernia remains unclear. This is an observational study to evaluate outcomes of incisional hernia with respect to the incision site and adhesion-related bowel obstruction after open and laparoscopic colorectal surgery.
Full description
The relationship between type of the approach and occurrence of incisional hernia remains unclear. This single center, prospective observational cohort study will be conducted to evaluate characteristics and outcomes of incisional hernia with regard to the impact of incision site and length and adhesion-related bowel obstruction, after open and laparoscopic colorectal surgery.
Primary endpoints
Participants
On the day of hospital discharge, patients will be asked by a blinded investigator to fill the Hospital Experience Questionnaire (HEQ).
Outpatient clinic follow-up
The Hospital Experience Questionnaire (HEQ) - In this questionnaire, the patients' satisfaction throughout the pre- and post-operative periods will be evaluated. The HEQ includes questions about complications, pain, length of hospital stay, time span until resumption of a normal diet, and return to daily activities (Dunker MS, Surg Endosc 1998;12:1334-40)
The Body Image Questionnaire (BIQ)
Incisional hernia is defined as "any abdominal wall gap with or without a bulge in the area of a postoperative scar perceptible or palpable by clinical examination or imaging". All sites of hernia will be considered: midline incision, Pfannenstiel (transverse), trocar site, specimen extraction site and ileostomy closure site. Incisional hernia occurring in patients in the laparoscopic group who ultimately need a laparotomy for conversion or postoperative complications within 30 days postop will be analyzed in the open group. Reoperation is defined as any return to the operating theatre (RTT) for an intra-abdominal procedure or wound complication on the index admission, or on a subsequent admission to hospital within 28 days of the initial resection. Conversion to an open operation is defined as performance of a conventional midline laparotomy, with an abdominal incision greater in size than that initially needed for specimen retrieval.
Early postoperative fascial dehiscence is distinguished from later incisional hernia, being defined by a clinically palpable gap in the abdominal fascia, with or without wound dehiscence, during the first 30 days after surgery. The distinction is made because these patients required a re-intervention, which precluded further long-term follow-up for incisional hernia.
Bowel obstruction is defined based on accepted clinical and radiologic criteria, including abdominal pain, distension, nausea, vomiting, obstipation, and distended bowel loops with air fluid levels, as evident on an abdominal X-ray.
The datasheet will be password-protected, with only the principal investigator and co-investigators having access to the information. Red-Cap (Research Electronic Data Capture) application will also be used to monitor and protect data.
Sample size calculation
Statistical Analysis
Hernia rates in relation to observation time were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier life-table method and compared via log rank test.
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18 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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