The Impact of Prior Abdominal Surgery on Complications of Abdominally Based Autologous Breast Reconstruction: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Journal of reconstructive microsurgery 2021 Vol.37(7) p. 566-579

Bond ES, Soteropulos CE, Yang Q, Poore SO

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Abstract

[BACKGROUND]  Approximately half of all patients presenting for autologous breast reconstruction have abdominal scars from prior surgery, the presence of which is considered by some a relative contraindication for abdominally based reconstruction. This meta-analysis examines the impact of prior abdominal surgery on the complication profile of breast reconstruction with abdominally based free tissue transfer.

[METHODS]  Literature search was conducted using PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science. Included studies examined patients with a history of prior abdominal surgery who then underwent abdominally based free flap breast reconstruction. Prior liposuction patients and those with atypical flap designs were excluded. The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale was used to assess study quality. Flap complications included total and partial flap loss, fat necrosis, infection, and reoperation. Donor-site complications included delayed wound healing, infection, seroma, hematoma, and abdominal wall morbidity (hernia, bulge, laxity). Relative risk and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) between groups were calculated. Forest plots, statistic heterogeneity assessments, and publication bias funnel plots were produced. Publication bias was corrected with a trim-and-fill protocol. Overall effects were assessed by fixed-effects and random-effects models.

[RESULTS]  After inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied, 16 articles were included for final review. These included 14 cohort and 2 case-control studies, with 1,656 (46.3%) patients and 2,236 (48.5%) flaps having undergone prior surgery. Meta-analysis showed patients with prior abdominal surgery were significantly more likely to experience donor-site delayed wound healing with a risk ratio of 1.27 (random 95% CI [1.00; 1.61]; = 4) after adjustment for publication bias. No other complications were statistically different between groups.

[CONCLUSION]  In patients with a history of prior abdominal surgery, abdominally based free tissue transfer is a safe and reliable option. Abdominal scars may slightly increase the risk of delayed donor-site wound healing, which can aid the surgeon in preoperative counseling.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 breast 유방 dict 4
시술 flap 피판재건술 dict 3
합병증 infection 감염 dict 2
시술 liposuction 지방흡입 dict 1
시술 free flap 피판재건술 dict 1
해부 abdominal scispacy 1
해부 tissue scispacy 1
해부 fat scispacy 1
합병증 flap breast scispacy 1
합병증 wound scispacy 1
합병증 hematoma 혈종 dict 1
합병증 seroma 장액종 dict 1
합병증 abdominal scispacy 1
합병증 necrosis 괴사 dict 1
약물 [BACKGROUND] scispacy 1
약물 CI [1.00 scispacy 1
질환 hernia C0019270
Hernia
scispacy 1
질환 CIs → confidence intervals scispacy 1
기타 patients scispacy 1
기타 abdominal wall scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Abdominal Wall; Humans; Mammaplasty; Postoperative Complications; Reoperation; Retrospective Studies; Surgical Flaps

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