Surgical practices in emergency umbilical hernia repair and implications for trial design

Josephine Walshaw*, Neil J. Smart, Natalie S. Blencowe, Matthew J. Lee

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Introduction: There is variation in the investigation, management, and surgical technique of acutely symptomatic umbilical hernias and optimal strategies remain to be established. This survey aimed to identify key variables influencing decision-making and preferred surgical techniques in emergency umbilical hernia care to help inform trial design and understand potential challenges to trial delivery.

Methods: A survey was distributed to surgeons through social media, personal contacts, and ASGBI lists. It comprised five sections: (i) performer of repair, (ii) repair preferences, (iii) important outcomes, (iv) perioperative antibiotic use, and (v) potential future trial design.

Results: There were 105 respondents, of which 49 (46.6%) were consultants. The median largest defect surgeons would attempt to repair with sutures alone was 2 cm (IQR 2–4 cm). In the acute setting, the most common mesh preferences are preperitoneal plane placement (n = 61, 58.1%), with synthetic non-absorbable mesh (n = 72, 68.6%), in clean (n = 41, 39.0%) or clean-contaminated (n = 52, 49.5%) wounds. Respondents believed suture repair to be associated with better short-term outcomes, and mesh repair with better long-term outcomes. Pre-/intra-operative antibiotics were very frequently given (n = 48, 45.7%) whilst post-operative antibiotics were rarely (n = 41, 39%) or very rarely (n = 28, 26.7%) given. The trial design felt to most likely influence practice is comparing mesh and suture repair, and post-operative antibiotics versus no post-operative antibiotics. Respondents indicated that to change their practice, the median difference in surgical site infection rate and recurrence rate would both need to be 5%.

Conclusion: This survey provides insight into surgical preferences in emergency umbilical hernia management, offering guidance for the design of future trials.

Original languageEnglish
JournalHernia
Early online date21 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 21 Sept 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.

Keywords

  • Emergency
  • Hernia
  • Umbilical hernia

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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