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Sutureless vs sutured abdominal wall closure for gastroschisis: Operative characteristics and early outcomes from the Midwest Pediatric Surgery Consortium

Authors :
Kristine S. Corkum
Patrick A. Dillon
Matthew P. Landman
Ronald B. Hirschl
Amy E. Lawrence
Jason D. Fraser
Kathryn H Wilkinson
Rashmi Kabre
Kevin N. Johnson
Madeline Scannell
Shawn D. St. Peter
Bethany J. Slater
Cynthia D. Downard
Katherine J. Deans
R. Cartland Burns
Charles M Leys
Peter C. Minneci
Julia Grabowski
Jonathan E. Kohler
Grace Z. Mak
Thomas T. Sato
Rachel M. Landisch
Beth Rymeski
Mary E. Fallat
Edward Hernandez
Michael A. Helmrath
Tiffany Wright
Samir K. Gadepalli
Source :
Journal of Pediatric Surgery. 55:2284-2288
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Purpose To report outcomes of sutured and sutureless closure for gastroschisis across a large multi-institutional cohort. Methods A retrospective study of infants with uncomplicated gastroschisis at 11 children's from 2014 to 2016 was performed. Outcomes of sutured and sutureless abdominal wall closure were compared. Results Among 315 neonates with uncomplicated gastroschisis, sutured closure was performed in 248 (79%); 212 undergoing sutured closure after silo and 36 undergoing primary sutured closure. Sutureless closure was performed in 67 (21%); 37 primary sutureless closure, 30 sutureless closure after silo placement. There was no significant difference in gestational age, gender, birth weight, total days on TPN, and time from closure to initial oral intake or goal feeds. Sutureless closure patients had less general anesthetics, ventilator use/time, time from birth to final closure, antibiotic use after closure, and surgical site/deep space infections. Subgroup analysis demonstrated primary sutureless closure had less ventilator use and anesthetics than primary sutured closure. Sutureless closure after silo led to less ventilator use/time, anesthetics, and antibiotics compared to those with sutured closure after silo. Conclusion Sutureless abdominal wall closure of neonates with gastroschisis was associated with less general anesthetics, antibiotic use, surgical site/deep space infections, and decreased ventilator time. These findings support further prospective study by our group. Level of Evidence Level III.

Details

ISSN :
00223468
Volume :
55
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Pediatric Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....348191fc74a240fd88f0af2a6a7c83df