Department of digestive and hepato-biliary surgery, university hospital center of Clermont-Ferrand, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Department of digestive and hepato-biliary surgery, university hospital center of Clermont-Ferrand, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
J Visc Surg. 2021 Jun;158(3):220-230. doi: 10.1016/j.jviscsurg.2020.11.001. Epub 2021 Jan 7.
Pancreatic fistula is the most common and dreaded complication after pancreatic resection, responsible for high morbidity and mortality (2 to 30%). Prophylactic drainage of the operative site is usually put in place to decrease and/or detect postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF) early. However, this policy is currently debated and the data from the literature are unclear. The goal of this update is to analyze the most recent evidence-based data with regard to prophylactic abdominal drainage after pancreatic resection (pancreatoduodenectomy [PD] or distal pancreatectomy [PD]). This systematic review of the literature between 1990 and 2020 sought to answer the following questions: should drainage of the operative site after pancreatectomy be routine or adapted to the risk of POPF? If a drainage is used, how long should it remain in the abdomen, what criteria should be used to decide to remove it, and what type of drainage should be preferred? Has the introduction of laparoscopy changed our practice? The literature seems to indicate that it is not possible to recommend the omission of routine drainage after pancreatic resection. By contrast, an approach based on the risk of POPF using the fistula risk score seems beneficial. When a drain is placed, early removal (within 5 days) seems feasible based on clinical, laboratory (C-reactive protein, leukocyte count, neutrophile/lymphocyte ratio, dosage and dynamic of amylase in the drains on D1, D3±D5) and radiological findings. This is in line with the development of enhanced recovery programs after pancreatic surgery. Finally, this literature review did not find any specific data relative to mini-invasive pancreatic surgery.
胰瘘是胰腺切除术后最常见且最令人担忧的并发症,可导致高发病率和死亡率(2%至 30%)。通常会在手术部位预防性放置引流管,以降低和/或早期发现术后胰瘘(POPF)。然而,目前对此策略存在争议,且文献中的数据并不明确。本次更新的目的是分析与胰腺切除术后(胰十二指肠切除术[PD]或胰体尾切除术[PD])预防性腹部引流相关的最新循证数据。本次对 1990 年至 2020 年文献的系统回顾旨在回答以下问题:胰腺切除术后是否应常规引流手术部位,还是应根据 POPF 的风险进行调整?如果使用引流,应在腹部保留多长时间,应使用哪些标准来决定拔除引流,以及应首选哪种类型的引流?腹腔镜的引入是否改变了我们的实践?文献似乎表明,不推荐常规引流胰腺切除术后的术区。相反,基于 POPF 风险(使用瘘管风险评分)的方法似乎是有益的。当放置引流管时,根据临床、实验室(C 反应蛋白、白细胞计数、中性粒细胞/淋巴细胞比值、引流液中淀粉酶的剂量和动态变化,在第 1、3±5 天)和影像学发现,早期(5 天内)拔除引流似乎是可行的。这与胰腺手术后强化康复方案的发展一致。最后,本次文献回顾未发现与微创胰腺手术相关的特定数据。