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Resection and primary anastomosis is a valid surgical option for infants with necrotizing enterocolitis who weigh less than 1000 g

Resection and primary anastomosis is a valid surgical option for infants with necrotizing enterocolitis who weigh less than 1000 g
Resection and primary anastomosis is a valid surgical option for infants with necrotizing enterocolitis who weigh less than 1000 g
Hypothesis: primary anastomosis following intestinal resection is a valid surgical option in the treatment of infants with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) who weigh less than 1000 g.

Design: retrospective case series.

Setting: tertiary neonatal surgery referral center.

Patients: all infants with confirmed NEC weighing less than 1000 g admitted to our intensive care unit over 4 years.

Intervention: or infants requiring laparotomy and intestinal resection, primary anastomosis was performed whenever the clinical condition permitted.

Main outcome measures: short- and long-term survival, length of intensive care unit stay, and complications.

Results: fifty-one infants with NEC who weighed less than 1000 g were admitted during the study period. Twelve infants underwent intestinal resection and primary anastomosis (median weight at surgery, 0.83 kg; range, 0.6-0.96 kg). One infant developed recurrent NEC, requiring further surgery, but there were no anastomotic leakages and no strictures. The median postoperative stay on our intensive care unit was 14 days (range, 2-49 days). All 12 infants survived their episode of acute NEC, and 8 are alive, with a median follow-up of 34.2 months (range, 4.7-48.4 months). Only 1 death was related to NEC. During the same period, 14 infants underwent intestinal resection and stoma formation. Ten survived the acute episode, and 6 are alive at a median follow-up of 24.0 months (range, 13.1-33.9 months). The median postoperative intensive care unit stay was 18 days (range, 2-74 days). Necrotizing enterocolitis–related complications occurred in 8 of these infants.

Conclusions: the outcome of infants with NEC who weigh less than 1000 g and undergo primary anastomosis is comparable to that of infants treated using alternative techniques. It is, therefore, a valid surgical option in selected infants. The mortality in this group of infants is high
0004-0010
1149-1151
Hall, N.J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Curry, J.
eb703108-4ad1-47d8-9db0-1a5200947496
Drake, D.P.
9586fbad-ef09-4d9f-a676-c98e5057d0e6
Spitz, L.
c3b867f9-b4f2-4d2a-9402-1d216292b63d
Kiely, E.M.
595ae7ac-8798-4405-8927-91d33ca25052
Pierro, A
b6c197c2-17d5-495f-854a-948eb87964ff
Hall, N.J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Curry, J.
eb703108-4ad1-47d8-9db0-1a5200947496
Drake, D.P.
9586fbad-ef09-4d9f-a676-c98e5057d0e6
Spitz, L.
c3b867f9-b4f2-4d2a-9402-1d216292b63d
Kiely, E.M.
595ae7ac-8798-4405-8927-91d33ca25052
Pierro, A
b6c197c2-17d5-495f-854a-948eb87964ff

Hall, N.J., Curry, J., Drake, D.P., Spitz, L., Kiely, E.M. and Pierro, A (2005) Resection and primary anastomosis is a valid surgical option for infants with necrotizing enterocolitis who weigh less than 1000 g. Archives of Surgery, 140 (12), 1149-1151. (PMID:16365234)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Hypothesis: primary anastomosis following intestinal resection is a valid surgical option in the treatment of infants with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) who weigh less than 1000 g.

Design: retrospective case series.

Setting: tertiary neonatal surgery referral center.

Patients: all infants with confirmed NEC weighing less than 1000 g admitted to our intensive care unit over 4 years.

Intervention: or infants requiring laparotomy and intestinal resection, primary anastomosis was performed whenever the clinical condition permitted.

Main outcome measures: short- and long-term survival, length of intensive care unit stay, and complications.

Results: fifty-one infants with NEC who weighed less than 1000 g were admitted during the study period. Twelve infants underwent intestinal resection and primary anastomosis (median weight at surgery, 0.83 kg; range, 0.6-0.96 kg). One infant developed recurrent NEC, requiring further surgery, but there were no anastomotic leakages and no strictures. The median postoperative stay on our intensive care unit was 14 days (range, 2-49 days). All 12 infants survived their episode of acute NEC, and 8 are alive, with a median follow-up of 34.2 months (range, 4.7-48.4 months). Only 1 death was related to NEC. During the same period, 14 infants underwent intestinal resection and stoma formation. Ten survived the acute episode, and 6 are alive at a median follow-up of 24.0 months (range, 13.1-33.9 months). The median postoperative intensive care unit stay was 18 days (range, 2-74 days). Necrotizing enterocolitis–related complications occurred in 8 of these infants.

Conclusions: the outcome of infants with NEC who weigh less than 1000 g and undergo primary anastomosis is comparable to that of infants treated using alternative techniques. It is, therefore, a valid surgical option in selected infants. The mortality in this group of infants is high

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More information

Published date: 1 December 2005
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378474
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378474
ISSN: 0004-0010
PURE UUID: 2df7cdda-79d2-4862-86fc-f0f8756fdf0d
ORCID for N.J. Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374

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Date deposited: 06 Jul 2015 10:21
Last modified: 10 Jan 2022 02:57

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Contributors

Author: N.J. Hall ORCID iD
Author: J. Curry
Author: D.P. Drake
Author: L. Spitz
Author: E.M. Kiely
Author: A Pierro

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