Aldameh Ali, McCall John L, Koea Jonathan B
Upper Gastrointestinal/Hepatobiliary Unit, Department of Surgery, Auckland Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand.
J Gastrointest Surg. 2005 May-Jun;9(5):667-71. doi: 10.1016/j.gassur.2004.12.006.
Routine drainage is no longer used after many major abdominal procedures. However, the role of routine surgical drainage after hepatic resection is unclear. Of the two randomized trials published, one concluded drainage is unnecessary after hepatectomy, and another concluded it could be used after major resections only. Between January 1999 and December 2003, 211 elective hepatic resections were performed by two surgeons at Auckland Hospital. Drains were used routinely by one surgeon (n = 126), while another routinely did not drain (n = 85). Patients undergoing a biliary reconstruction were not included in this analysis. Patient and clinical data were recorded prospectively, and no outcome analyses were performed until 2004. The demographic features were similar between the drained and non-drained groups. There were no differences in length of hospital stay (no drain, 7 +/- 0.8 days; drain, 7 +/- 0.9 days: P = not significant [NS]), in mortality (no drain, 1.2%; drain, 1.6%: P = NS), biliary fistula (no drain, zero cases; drain, two cases: P = NS), or overall complication rate (no drain, 50.5%; drain, 54.7%: P = NS). Both groups had similar rates of postoperative collection (no drain, four patients [5%]; drain, five patients [4%]: P = NS), and there was no difference in the use of percutaneous drainage of collections between the groups (no drain, four patients [5%]; drain, two patients [2%]: P = NS). Multivariate analysis showed that intraoperative blood loss of 2000 ml or greater (relative risk [RR], 1.57; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.39-1.75; P < 0.01), number of segments resected (RR, 1.4; 95% CI, 1.21-1.89; P < 0.01), and presence of steatosis/fibrosis or cirrhosis (RR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.01-2.1; P < 0.05) to be predictive of postoperative complications. The presence of a surgical drain was not predictive of complications. Routine surgical drainage after elective hepatectomy is not necessary.
在许多大型腹部手术后,常规引流已不再使用。然而,肝切除术后常规手术引流的作用尚不清楚。在已发表的两项随机试验中,一项得出结论,肝切除术后无需引流,另一项则得出结论,仅在大型切除术后可使用引流。1999年1月至2003年12月期间,奥克兰医院的两位外科医生进行了211例择期肝切除术。一位外科医生常规使用引流管(n = 126),而另一位则常规不进行引流(n = 85)。接受胆道重建的患者未纳入本分析。前瞻性记录患者和临床数据,直到2004年才进行结果分析。引流组和未引流组的人口统计学特征相似。住院时间(未引流组,7±0.8天;引流组,7±0.9天:P = 无显著差异[NS])、死亡率(未引流组,1.2%;引流组,1.6%:P = NS)、胆瘘(未引流组,零例;引流组,两例:P = NS)或总体并发症发生率(未引流组,50.5%;引流组,54.7%:P = NS)均无差异。两组术后积液发生率相似(未引流组,4例患者[5%];引流组,5例患者[4%]:P = NS),两组间经皮引流积液的使用情况也无差异(未引流组,4例患者[5%];引流组,2例患者[2%]:P = NS)。多因素分析显示,术中失血2000毫升或更多(相对危险度[RR],1.57;95%置信区间[CI],1.39 - 1.75;P < 0.01)、切除的肝段数量(RR,1.4;95% CI,1.21 - 1.89;P < 0.01)以及存在脂肪变性/纤维化或肝硬化(RR,1.6;95% CI,1.01 - 2.1;P < 0.05)可预测术后并发症。放置手术引流管并不能预测并发症。择期肝切除术后常规手术引流没有必要。