Journal of Pediatric Surgery, volume 57, issue 9, pages 49-54

Treatment of jejunoileal atresia by primary anastomosis or enterostomy: Double the operations, double the risk of complications

Laurens D Eeftinck Schattenkerk
Manouk Backes
Wouter J de Jonge
Ernest Lw Van Heurn
Joep PM Derikx
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-09-01
scimago Q1
SJR0.949
CiteScore4.9
Impact factor2.4
ISSN00223468, 15315037
General Medicine
Surgery
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Abstract

Abstract

Purpose

No study has evaluated complication rates of the combined operations needed for temporary Enterostomy compared to primary anastomosis in the treatment of Jejunoileal Atresia. Therefore the aim of this study is: 1) to compare the occurrence of severe postoperative complications (defined as Clavien-Dindo ≥III within 30 days) and 2) to compare the occurrence of different short- and long-term complications following treatment for Jejunoileal atresia either by primary anastomosis or the combined Enterostomy procedures.

Methods

All consecutive neonates treated for Jejunoileal Atresias between January 1998 and February 2021 at our tertiary academic centres were retrospectively included. Perioperative characteristics and severity of postoperative complications (Clavien-Dindo) were extracted and evaluated, using chi-squared statistics, following each operation per treatment.

Results

Eighty patients were included of whom 48 (60%) received a primary anastomosis and 32 (40%) an Enterostomy. Perioperative baseline characteristics were comparable, apart from significantly more patients with a gastroschisis and significantly less patients with jejunum atresia in the Enterostomy group. Our results showed that 1) significantly (p ≤ 0.01) more CD ≥III occur following treatment by Enterostomy. 2) Both short-term (surgical site infection, wound dehiscence) and long-term (short bowel syndrome, adhesive bowel obstruction) complications occurred significantly more in those treated by Enterostomy. We showed no significant difference in anastomotic leakage/stenosis and mortality rates between both treatment strategies.

Conclusion

Although perioperative factors might necessitate an Enterostomy, we advise a low threshold for performing a primary anastomosis when in doubt, taking into account the double risk of major complications found in patients treated with a temporary Enterostomy.

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