Metaanalysis of the safety and efficacy of an adhesion barrier (Interceed TC7) in laparotomy

  • Baylor College of Medicine ROR

The Journal of Reproductive Medicine, 44(4), 325-331

Source

Abstract

Objective

To evaluate the safety and efficacy of an oxidized, regenerated, cellulose adhesion barrier (Interceed TC7) in the reduction of pelvic adhesions.

Study Design

Clinical studies published or completed by December 31, 1994, evaluating the barrier used at laparotomy were considered for a metaanalysis.

Results

Of 10 studies (n = 560) identified, data from 7 (n = 389) met the inclusion criteria for determining the reduction in the incidence of adhesions and 5 (n = 311) for determining the reduction in adhesion extent (raw surface area after adhesiolysis). There was a 24.2 +/- 3.3% difference in the incidence of adhesions (P < .001) between barrier-treated and untreated sites. Adhesion-free outcomes were 1.5-2.5 times more likely at barrier-treated sites than at sites with good surgical technique alone (odds ratio = 2.89; 95% confidence interval = 2.15-3.90). Barrier treatment resulted in a greater reduction (1.1 +/- 0.4 cm2) in adhesion extent (raw surface area) than good surgical technique alone (P < .001). Four adverse events were recorded; they were typical of those seen after surgery. No event was considered to be definitely related to the use of the barrier.

Conclusion

The barrier significantly reduced the incidence and extent of adhesions as compared with no treatment, confirming the conclusion from individual studies that it is safe and effective in pelvic laparotomy surgery.

Topics

Interceed TC7 adhesion barrier laparotomy meta-analysis, oxidized regenerated cellulose adhesion prevention pelvic surgery, adhesion barrier efficacy safety pelvic laparotomy, post-surgical adhesion prevention adhesiolysis outcomes, Interceed adhesion reduction incidence extent metaanalysis, Wiseman Diamond adhesion barrier meta-analysis laparotomy, pelvic adhesion prevention surgical technique barrier comparison, adhesion-free outcomes odds ratio barrier versus untreated, oxidized cellulose barrier adhesion reformation reduction, adhesiolysis raw surface area adhesion extent reduction barrier

Cite this article

Wiseman, D. M., Trout, J. R., Franklin, R. R., & Diamond, M. P. (1999). Metaanalysis of the safety and efficacy of an adhesion barrier (Interceed TC7) in laparotomy. *The Journal of reproductive medicine*, *44*(4), 325-331.

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