Uchida Keiichi, Ohtsuka Yoshikazu, Yoden Atsushi, Tajiri Hitoshi, Kimura Hideaki, Isihige Takashi, Yamada Hiroyuki, Arai Katsuhiro, Tomomasa Takeshi, Ushijima Kosuke, Aomatsu Tomoki, Nagata Satoru, Otake Kohei, Matsushita Kohei, Inoue Mikihiro, Kudo Takahiro, Hosoi Kenji, Takeuchi Kazuo, Shimizu Toshiaki
Department of Gastrointestinal and Pediatric Surgery, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, Mie, Japan.
Members of the Japanese Society for Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease Working Group.
Intractable Rare Dis Res. 2017 May;6(2):106-113. doi: 10.5582/irdr.2017.01012.
Pediatric ulcerative colitis (UC) sometimes progresses to an intractable condition for medical therapy. The surgical management of UC is challenging because of difficult procedures and frequent infectious complications. The aim of this study was to survey surgical procedures and infectious complications in pediatric patients with UC in Japan and to assess the relationship between preoperatively administered immunosuppressive drugs and postoperative surgical site infection (SSI). A survey of pediatric patients treated from 2000 to 2012 was sent to 683 facilities nationwide. Secondary questionnaires were sent to physicians who followed up patients with UC who had undergone surgery with the aim of assessing the relationships between postoperative SSI and selected preoperative patient characteristics, disease severity, medications, and operative procedures. Data for 136 patients (77 boys and 59 girls) were assessed. Median age at surgery was 14.1 years (range: 2.4-18.9 years). Surgery was performed in one stage in 35 cases, two stages in 57 cases, and three stages in 44 cases. SSI occurred in 36/136 patients (26%). According to multiple logistic regression analysis, there were statistically significant associations between SSI and staged surgery (three/one, OR: 6.7, 95% CI: 2.1-25.5, = 0.0007; three/two, OR: 3.4, 95% CI: 1.4-8.6, = 0.0069) and female sex (OR: 2.3, 95% CI: 1.0-5.4, = 0.0434). Preoperative medications and incidence of SSI were not significantly associated. Preoperative immunosuppressive medication does not affect the incidence of SSI. Three-stage surgery and female sex are independent predictors of development of postoperative SSIs in pediatric patients with UC.
小儿溃疡性结肠炎(UC)有时会发展为药物治疗难以控制的疾病。由于手术操作困难且感染并发症频发,UC的外科治疗颇具挑战性。本研究旨在调查日本小儿UC患者的手术操作及感染并发症情况,并评估术前使用免疫抑制药物与术后手术部位感染(SSI)之间的关系。向全国683家医疗机构发送了关于2000年至2012年接受治疗的小儿患者的调查问卷。向对接受手术的UC患者进行随访的医生发送了二次调查问卷,目的是评估术后SSI与选定的术前患者特征、疾病严重程度、用药情况及手术操作之间的关系。对136例患者(77例男孩和59例女孩)的数据进行了评估。手术时的中位年龄为14.1岁(范围:2.4 - 18.9岁)。35例患者进行了一期手术,57例进行了二期手术,44例进行了三期手术。136例患者中有36例(26%)发生了SSI。根据多因素逻辑回归分析,SSI与分期手术(三期/一期,OR:6.7,95%CI:2.1 - 25.5,P = 0.0007;三期/二期,OR:3.4,95%CI:1.4 - 8.6,P = 0.0069)及女性性别(OR:2.3,95%CI:1.0 - 5.4,P = 0.0434)之间存在统计学显著关联。术前用药与SSI发生率无显著关联。术前免疫抑制药物不影响SSI的发生率。三期手术和女性性别是小儿UC患者术后发生SSI的独立预测因素。