Adhesion-related readmissions following gynaecological laparoscopy or laparotomy in Scotland: an epidemiological study of 24 046 patients

Human reproduction (Oxford, England), 19(8), 1877-1885

DOI 10.1093/humrep/deh321 PMID 15178659 Source

Abstract

BackgroundGynaecological laparotomies are associated with considerable adhesion-related burdens; however, few data are available concerning laparoscopic surgery. This study evaluated the epidemiology of adhesion-related readmissions following open and laparoscopic procedures.MethodsRecords from 24,046 patients undergoing gynaecological surgery in Scottish National Health Service hospitals during 1996 were assessed retrospectively. Cohorts comprised 15,197 patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery and 8849 patients undergoing laparotomies. Adhesion-related readmission episodes (directly and possibly related) were assessed over 4 years following initial surgery and were expressed as percentages of the number of initial procedures.ResultsDirectly adhesion-related readmissions 1 year after initial laparoscopic surgery were: in the high-risk group (adhesiolysis and cyst drainage) 1.3%; medium-risk (therapeutic and diagnostic procedures not categorized as high- or low-risk) 1.5%; and low-risk (Fallopian tube sterilizations) 0.2%. Readmissions for laparotomy following surgery on the Fallopian tubes were 0.9%, ovaries 2.1%, uterus 0.6% and vagina 0%. Readmissions occurred at reduced rates in the second, third and fourth years after surgery. Exclusion of patients who underwent surgery within the previous 5 years resulted in reduced readmission rates following laparotomy and high-risk laparoscopy.ConclusionsWith the exception of laparoscopic sterilizations, open and laparoscopic gynaecological surgery are associated with comparable risks of adhesion-related readmissions.

Topics

adhesion formation after laparoscopy, gynecological surgery adhesion readmission rates, laparoscopy versus laparotomy adhesions, adhesion-related complications gynecologic surgery, post-surgical adhesions reproductive surgery, laparoscopic sterilization adhesion risk, ovarian surgery adhesion prevention, adhesiolysis readmission epidemiology, minimally invasive surgery adhesion outcomes, fertility-sparing surgery adhesion rates, postoperative adhesions gynecology, laparoscopic adhesion burden

Cite this article

Lower, A., Hawthorn, R., & Clark, D. (2003). Adhesion-Related Readmissions Following Gynaecological Laparoscopy or Gynaecological Laparotomy in Scotland: An Epidemiological Study of 24,046 Patients. *Human reproduction (Oxford, England)*, *19*(8), 1877-1885.

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