Smith Stella R, Newton Katy, Smith Jennifer A, Dumville Jo C, Iheozor-Ejiofor Zipporah, Pearce Lyndsay E, Barrow Paul J, Hancock Laura, Hill James
General Surgery, North Western Deanery, 4th Floor, 3 Piccadilly, Manchester, UK, M1 3BN.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Aug 26;2016(8):CD011193. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011193.pub2.
A perianal abscess is a collection of pus under the skin, around the anus. It usually occurs due to an infection of an anal gland. In the UK, the annual incidence is 40 per 100,000 of the adult population, and the standard treatment is admission to hospital for incision and drainage under general anaesthetic. Following drainage of the pus, an internal dressing (pack) is placed into the cavity to stop bleeding. Common practice is for community nursing teams to change the pack regularly until the cavity heals. Some practitioners in the USA and Australia make a small stab incision under local anaesthetic and place a catheter into the cavity which drains into an external dressing. It is removed when it stops draining. Elsewhere in the USA, simple drainage is performed in an outpatient setting under local anaesthetic.
To assess the effects of internal dressings in healing wound cavities resulting from drainage of perianal abscesses.
In May 2016 we searched: The Cochrane Wounds Specialised Register; The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library); Ovid MEDLINE; Ovid MEDLINE (In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations); Ovid EMBASE and EBSCO CINAHL Plus. We also searched clinical trial registries to identify ongoing and unpublished studies, and searched reference lists of relevant reports to identify additional studies. We did not restrict studies with respect to language, date of publication, or study setting.
Published or unpublished randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing any type of internal dressing (packing) used in the post-operative management of perianal abscess cavities with alternative treatments or different types of internal dressing.
Two review authors independently performed study selection, risk of bias assessment, and data extraction.
We included two studies, with a total of 64 randomised participants (50 and 14 participants) aged 18 years or over, with a perianal abscess. In both studies, participants were enrolled on the first post-operative day and randomised to continued packing by community district nursing teams or to no packing. Participants in the non-packing group managed their own wounds in the community and used absorbant dressings to cover the area. Fortnightly follow-up was undertaken until the cavity closed and the skin re-epithelialised, which constituted healing. For non-attenders, telephone follow-up was conducted.Both studies were at high risk of bias due to risk of attrition, performance and detection bias.It was not possible to pool the two studies for the outcome of time to healing. It is unclear whether continued post-operative packing of the cavity of perianal abscesses affects time to complete healing. One study reported a mean time to wound healing of 26.8 days (95% confidence interval (CI) 22.7 to 30.7) in the packing group and 19.5 days (95% CI 13.6 to 25.4) in the non-packing group (it was not clear if all participants healed). We re-analysed the data and found no clear difference in the time to healing (7.30 days longer in the packing group, 95% CI -2.24 to 16.84; 14 participants). This was assessed as very low quality evidence (downgraded three levels for very serious imprecision and serious risk of bias). The second study reported a median time to complete wound healing of 24.5 days (range 10 to 150 days) in the packing group and 21 days (range 8 to 90 days) in the non-packed group. There was insufficient information to be able to recreate the analysis and the original analysis was inappropriate (did not account for censoring). This second study also provided very low quality evidence (downgraded four levels for serious risk of bias, serious indirectness and very serious imprecision).There was very low quality evidence (downgraded for risk of bias, indirectness and imprecision) of no difference in wound pain scores at the initial dressing change. Both studies also reported patients' retrospective judgement of wound pain over the preceding two weeks (visual analogue scale, VAS) as lower for the non-packed group (2; both studies) compared with the packed group (0; both studies); (very low quality evidence) but we have been unable to reproduce these analyses as no variance data were published.There was no clear evidence of a difference in the number of post-operative fistulae detected between the packed and non-packed groups (risk ratio (RR) 2.31, 95% CIs 0.56 to 9.45, I(2) = 0%) (very low quality evidence downgraded three levels for very serious imprecision and serious risk of bias).There was no clear evidence of a difference in the number of abscess recurrences between the packed and non-packed groups over the variable follow-up periods (RR 0.72, 95% CI 0.22 to 2.37, I(2) = 0%) (very low quality evidence downgraded three levels for serious risk of bias and very serious imprecision).No study reported participant health-related quality of life/health status, incontinence rates, time to return to work or normal function, resource use in terms of number of dressing changes or visits to a nurse, or change in wound size.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: It is unclear whether using internal dressings (packing) for the healing of perianal abscess cavities influences time to healing, wound pain, development of fistulae, abscess recurrence or other outcomes. Despite this absence of evidence, the practice of packing abscess cavities is commonplace. Given the lack of high quality evidence, decisions to pack may be based on local practices or patient preferences. Further clinical research is needed to assess the effects and patient experience of packing.
肛周脓肿是指肛门周围皮肤下的脓液聚集。它通常由肛门腺感染引起。在英国,成人年发病率为每10万人中有40例,标准治疗方法是住院在全身麻醉下进行切开引流。排出脓液后,会在腔隙内放置内部敷料(填塞物)以止血。常见做法是社区护理团队定期更换填塞物,直到腔隙愈合。美国和澳大利亚的一些从业者在局部麻醉下做一个小切口,并将导管放入腔隙,导管连接到外部敷料。当不再有引流时将导管取出。在美国其他地区,在门诊局部麻醉下进行简单引流。
评估内部敷料对肛周脓肿引流后伤口腔隙愈合的影响。
2016年5月,我们检索了:Cochrane伤口专业注册库;Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)(Cochrane图书馆);Ovid MEDLINE;Ovid MEDLINE(在研及其他未索引引文);Ovid EMBASE和EBSCO CINAHL Plus。我们还检索了临床试验注册库以识别正在进行和未发表的研究,并检索了相关报告的参考文献列表以识别其他研究。我们没有对研究的语言、发表日期或研究背景进行限制。
比较用于肛周脓肿腔隙术后管理的任何类型内部敷料(填塞)与替代治疗或不同类型内部敷料的已发表或未发表的随机对照试验(RCT)。
两位综述作者独立进行研究选择、偏倚风险评估和数据提取。
我们纳入了两项研究,共有64名年龄18岁及以上的随机参与者(分别为50名和14名参与者)患有肛周脓肿。在两项研究中,参与者均在术后第一天入组,并随机分为由社区地区护理团队继续填塞或不进行填塞。不填塞组的参与者在社区自行处理伤口,并使用吸收性敷料覆盖该区域。每两周进行一次随访,直到腔隙闭合且皮肤重新上皮化,即视为愈合。对于未参与者,进行电话随访。由于失访、实施和检测偏倚风险,两项研究均存在较高偏倚风险。无法将两项研究合并以得出愈合时间的结果。尚不清楚肛周脓肿腔隙术后继续填塞是否会影响完全愈合的时间。一项研究报告,填塞组伤口愈合的平均时间为26.8天(95%置信区间(CI)22.7至30.7),不填塞组为19.5天(95%CI 13.6至25.4)(不清楚所有参与者是否均已愈合)。我们重新分析了数据,发现愈合时间无明显差异(填塞组延长7.30天,95%CI -2.24至16.84;14名参与者)。这被评估为极低质量证据(因非常严重的不精确性和严重偏倚风险而降级三级)。第二项研究报告,填塞组伤口完全愈合的中位时间为24.5天(范围为10至150天),未填塞组为21天(范围为8至90天)。没有足够信息能够重现分析,且原始分析不恰当(未考虑删失数据)。第二项研究也提供了极低质量证据(因严重偏倚风险、严重间接性和非常严重的不精确性而降级四级)。在初次更换敷料时,伤口疼痛评分无差异的证据质量极低(因偏倚风险、间接性和不精确性而降级)。两项研究还报告,患者对前两周伤口疼痛的回顾性判断(视觉模拟量表,VAS)显示,未填塞组(两项研究均为2)低于填塞组(两项研究均为0);(极低质量证据)但由于未发表方差数据,我们无法重现这些分析。在填塞组和未填塞组之间,未发现术后肛瘘数量有明显差异的证据(风险比(RR)2.31,95%CI 0.56至9.45,I² = 0%)(极低质量证据,因非常严重的不精确性和严重偏倚风险而降级三级)。在不同的随访期内,填塞组和未填塞组之间脓肿复发数量无明显差异的证据(RR 0.72,95%CI 0.22至2.37,I² = 0%)(极低质量证据,因严重偏倚风险和非常严重的不精确性而降级三级)。没有研究报告参与者的健康相关生活质量/健康状况、失禁率、恢复工作或正常功能的时间、换药次数或看护士次数方面的资源使用情况,或伤口大小变化。
尚不清楚使用内部敷料(填塞)促进肛周脓肿腔隙愈合是否会影响愈合时间、伤口疼痛、肛瘘形成、脓肿复发或其他结局。尽管缺乏证据,但脓肿腔隙填塞的做法很常见。鉴于缺乏高质量证据,填塞的决定可能基于当地做法或患者偏好。需要进一步的临床研究来评估填塞的效果和患者体验。