학술논문

Surgical Options for the Treatment of Perianal and Anovaginal Fistulas in the Setting of Ileoanal Pouch Crohn's Disease: Experience of a Tertiary Center.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery. Dec2023, Vol. 27 Issue 12, p2867-2875. 9p.
Subject
*RESTORATIVE proctocolectomy
*CROHN'S disease
*FISTULA
*ANAL diseases
*ULCERATIVE colitis
Language
ISSN
1091-255X
Abstract
Background: The leading cause of pouch failure following ileal pouch-anal anastomosis are peri-pouch fistulas and pelvic sepsis. Objective: Determine the overall efficacy of current surgical therapy for the treatment of perianal and anovaginal fistulizing disease related to Crohn's disease phenotype of the pouch. Design: Retrospective cohort study of a prospectively maintained, IRB-approved database. Settings/Patients: Ninety-one (2.3%) patients of 3058 patients with an original diagnosis of ulcerative colitis who underwent proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis between 2000 and 2021 at the Cleveland Clinic and underwent postoperative surgery for Crohn's-related perianal disease. Interventions: Two hundred thirty-one operations for perianal or anovaginal fistula(s). Main Outcome and Measures: Healing rate of surgical therapy for peri-pouch fistulizing disease, impact of recurrent interventions on outcomes, and predictors of surgical failure. Results: Overall mean age was 39.1 (± 11.6) years, with a BMI of 25.3 (± 6.3) kg/m2. More than half of the patients were female (n = 52, 57.1%). Sixty-three patients (69.2%) had a perianal fistula, 25 (27.5%) had an anovaginal fistula, and 3 (3.3%) patients had both. Overall success rate for healing was 59.3% (n = 54/91) at a mean follow-up of 6.4 (± 4.8) years. Seventeen (18.7%) patients underwent a concomitant diverting loop ileostomy. Among them, eight (47.0%) patients had the ileostomy closure after a mean time of 9.7 (± 2.8) months. In the multivariable logistic regression model, patients who had seton insertions in any operation were significantly less likely to heal (OR 0.11 95%, CI 0.03–0.43, p = 0.001). Overall pouch failure rate was 12.1%. Limitations: Retrospective single-center study which lacks a control arm and consistent long-term follow-up specific to a population-based dataset. Conclusions: Pouch patients who develop perianal disease are difficult to treat, sometimes requiring pouch excision. However, when medical treatment alone is not effective, a multidisciplinary approach including surgical intervention can result in complete fistula healing in more than half of the cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]