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Early surgery for adhesive bowel obstruction can save lives

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A pattern to watch

The study by Dr. Teixeira is intriguing in

that it suggests a return to practice patterns from a prior era.

Dr. Chad Whelan

The study does report increased risk in

complications including mortality with delays in surgery for small bowel

obstructions, even with risk adjustment. However, this is not a controlled

trial which limits our ability to reach definitive conclusions from it. Still,

hospitalists often are the primary physicians for patients admitted for small

bowel obstructions and should be aware of these findings so that they can

ensure that they have early surgical involvement.

Chad Whelan, M.D., is associate chief medical officer for

performance improvement and innovation and an associate professor of medicine

at the University

of Chicago Medical Center.


 

AT THE ASA ANNUAL MEETING

INDIANAPOLIS – Patients requiring surgery for adhesive small bowel obstruction have markedly lower major morbidity and mortality rates if they’re operated on within 24 hours of hospital admission, according to an analysis of a large national database.

This finding is at odds with the conventional wisdom.

Both the World Society of Emergency Surgery and the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma recommend in published guidelines an initial 3-5 days of nonoperative management to give the obstruction a chance to resolve on its own, Dr. Pedro G. Teixeira noted in presenting the study findings at the annual meeting of the American Surgical Association.

Courtesy Wikimedia Commons/James Heilman, MD/Creative Commons License

Adhesive small bowel obstructions should be operated on within 24 hours of the patient’s hospital admission, said Dr. Pedro Teixeira.

He and his coinvestigators identified 4,163 patients in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) database for 2005-2010 who underwent emergency laparotomy for adhesive bowel obstruction. Thirty-day mortality was 3% in those operated upon within 24 hours of hospital admission. It rose in stepwise fashion thereafter: 4% mortality with surgery at 24-48 hours, 7% with surgery at 48-72 hours, and 9% a threefold increase – when surgery was delayed beyond 72 hours, according to Dr. Teixeira of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

Similarly, the incidence of systemic infectious complications, including pneumonia, urinary tract infections, and sepsis, climbed from 12% with early operation to 17% when surgery occurred at 24-48 hours, 21% at 48-72 hours, and 24% thereafter.

In a multivariate analysis adjusted for baseline comorbidities and other potential confounding variables, surgery delayed for 24 hours or more after admission was associated with a highly significant 58% increased risk of mortality, a 33% increase in surgical site infections, a 36% greater risk of pneumonia, and a 47% increased risk of septic shock, he continued.

Discussant Gregory J. Jurkovich commented that this study challenges current dogma and harkens back to a century-old adage that has since been cast aside, namely, "Never let the sun set on a bowel obstruction."

The trouble is, however, that having a low threshold for surgery within 24 hours would subject a massive number of patients to an unnecessary operation.

An analysis of Nationwide Inpatient Sample data for 2009 by other investigators concluded that bowel obstruction resolved on its own within 3 days in 60% of patients and within 5 days in 80%. Fewer than 20% of the patients who presented with adhesive small bowel obstruction without evidence of ischemia underwent surgery, noted Dr. Jurkovich, director of surgery at Denver Health Medical Center and professor of trauma surgery and vice chairman of the department of surgery at the University of Colorado at Denver.

Dr. Teixeira concurred that bowel obstruction will resolve on its own in most patients. The challenge for surgeons in light of his study findings, he stressed, is to expedite the identification of those patients who will fail the period of nonoperative management. The best tool for that, in his view, is a CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis with water-soluble contrast.

At the University of Southern California, he explained, a patient who presents with adhesive bowel obstruction without evidence of ischemia undergoes the CT scan and is admitted to the surgical observation unit for close monitoring.

"At our institution, failure to demonstrate contrast progression through the colon within 24 hours would be a very strong indication for surgical exploration," according to Dr. Teixeira.

He reported having no financial conflicts.

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

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