Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1018...

Topic
Original Article
Author
Smalbroek, Bo P Weijs, Teus J Dijksman, Lea M Poelmann, Floris B Goense, Lucas Dijkstra, Robert R Wijffels, Niels A T Boerma, Djamila Smits, Anke B
Langue
en
Editor

Oxford University Press

Category

BJS Open

Year

2023

listing date

11/30/2023

Keywords
deviating 0 versus surgery bridge colon study left-sided obstructive stoma colostomy cancer cent
Metrics

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer causes the majority of large bowel obstructions and surgical resection remains the gold standard for curative treatment.

There is evidence that a deviating stoma as a bridge to surgery can reduce postoperative mortality rate; however, the optimal stoma type is unclear.

The aim of this study was to compare outcomes between ileostomy and colostomy as a bridge to surgery in left-sided obstructive colon cancer.

METHODS: This was a national, retrospective population-based cohort study with 75 contributing hospitals.

Patients with radiological left-sided obstructive colon cancer between 2009 and 2016, where a deviating stoma was used as a bridge to surgery, were included.

Exclusion criteria were palliative treatment intent, perforation at presentation, emergency resection, and multivisceral resection.

RESULTS: A total of 321 patients underwent a deviating stoma; 41 (12.7 per cent) ileostomies and 280 (87.2 per cent) colostomies.

The ileostomy group had longer length of stay (median 13 (interquartile range (i.q.r.) 10–16) versus 9 (i.q.r. 6–14) days, P = 0.003) and more nutritional support during the bridging interval.

Both groups showed similar complication rates in the bridging interval and after primary resection, including anastomotic leakage.

Stoma reversal during resection was more common in the colostomy group (9 (22.0 per cent) versus 129 (46.1 per cent) for ileostomy and colostomy respectively, P = 0.006).

CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that patients having a colostomy as a bridge to surgery in left-sided obstructive colon cancer had a shorter length of stay and lower need for nutritional support.

No difference in postoperative complications were found.

Smalbroek, Bo P,Weijs, Teus J,Dijksman, Lea M,Poelmann, Floris B,Goense, Lucas,Dijkstra, Robert R,Wijffels, Niels A T,Boerma, Djamila,Smits, Anke B,, 2023, Use of ileostomy versus colostomy as a bridge to surgery in left-sided obstructive colon cancer: retrospective cohort study, Oxford University Press

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