Merad F, Yahchouchi E, Hay J M, Fingerhut A, Laborde Y, Langlois-Zantain O
Surgery Units, Hôpital Louis Mourier, Colombes, France.
Arch Surg. 1998 Mar;133(3):309-14. doi: 10.1001/archsurg.133.3.309.
Only 4 controlled trials have investigated whether prophylactic abdominal drainage was of value after colonic resection. None have been able to find any statistically significant difference, but the number of patients was small and the beta error risk was high.
To compare patients who underwent abdominal drainage with those who did not for the rate and severity of complications after elective colonic resection followed immediately by anastomosis of the suprapromontory colon and to compare suction drains with nonsuction drains.
Between September 1990 and June 1995, 319 patients (135 men and 184 women), whose mean age was 67 years (range, 22-95 years), with carcinoma, benign tumors, or colitis, located anywhere between the ascending and sigmoid colons, were included in the study. Patients were comparable for demographic characteristics, except that there were more patients with ascites in the group that did not undergo abdominal drainage (P<.02).
After 2 protocol violations, 156 patients were randomized to the abdominal drainage group and 161 to the no abdominal drainage group. All 317 anastomoses were tested for airtightness intraoperatively and repaired if leakage was found (n=71), and all patients with anastomoses received a routine diatrizoate sodium enema to detect infraclinical leakage.
The postoperative complications possibly influenced by drainage included (1) deep complications for which drainage can lead to early diagnosis, such as generalized or localized peritonitis, intraabdominal hemorrhage, or hematoma; (2) complications believed to be enhanced by drainage, such as an operative wound (an abscess, disruption, or incisional hernia) or pulmonary (microatelectasis) and intestinal obstructions; and (3) complications directly due to the drains, such as ulcerations leading to fistulae, hemorrhages, drainage tract infections, difficulty in removal, intra-abdominal retention, and incisional disruptions. Subsidiary end points were the severity of these complications as assessed by the number of related subsequent operations and deaths.
Twenty-six patients overall (8%) had postoperative complications possibly influenced by drainage (9% in the group that underwent abdominal drainage and 8% in the group that did not). This difference was not statistically significant (P<.90). One patient had a fistula directly imputable to drainage. There was no difference between suction and nonsuction drainage (P<.90).
Routine abdominal drainage after colonic resection and immediate anastomosis decreases neither the rate nor the severity of anastomotic leakage. It can, occasionally, be detrimental.
仅有4项对照试验研究了结肠切除术后预防性腹腔引流是否有价值。尚无试验能够发现任何具有统计学意义的差异,但患者数量较少且Ⅱ类错误风险较高。
比较接受腹腔引流与未接受腹腔引流的患者在择期结肠切除并立即行乙状结肠上段吻合术后并发症的发生率及严重程度,并比较吸引引流管与非吸引引流管的效果。
1990年9月至1995年6月,纳入319例患者(135例男性和184例女性),平均年龄67岁(范围22 - 95岁),患有癌、良性肿瘤或结肠炎,病变位于升结肠至乙状结肠的任何部位。除未接受腹腔引流组腹水患者较多外(P<0.02),两组患者的人口统计学特征具有可比性。
排除2例违反方案的患者后,156例患者被随机分配至腹腔引流组,161例患者被随机分配至非腹腔引流组。术中对所有317例吻合口进行气密性检测,若发现渗漏则进行修补(n = 71),所有吻合口患者均接受常规泛影葡胺灌肠以检测亚临床渗漏。
术后可能受引流影响的并发症包括:(1)引流可导致早期诊断的深部并发症,如弥漫性或局限性腹膜炎、腹腔内出血或血肿;(2)认为引流会加重的并发症,如手术切口(脓肿、裂开或切口疝)或肺部(微小肺不张)及肠梗阻;(3)直接由引流管导致的并发症,如溃疡导致瘘管、出血、引流道感染、拔除困难、腹腔内残留及切口裂开。次要终点是根据相关后续手术次数和死亡人数评估的这些并发症的严重程度。
总体上26例患者(8%)发生了可能受引流影响的术后并发症(腹腔引流组为9%,非腹腔引流组为8%)。这一差异无统计学意义(P<0.90)。1例患者发生了直接归因于引流的瘘管。吸引引流与非吸引引流之间无差异(P<0.90)。
结肠切除并立即吻合术后常规腹腔引流既不能降低吻合口漏的发生率,也不能减轻其严重程度。偶尔,它可能是有害的。