Nonoperative management of acute complicated diverticulitis with pericolic and/or distant extraluminal air: A systematic review

Author:

Morini Andrea1ORCID,Zizzo Maurizio1ORCID,Tumiati David1,Mereu Federica1,Bernini Diego2,Fabozzi Massimiliano1

Affiliation:

1. Reggio Emilia Local Agency—IRCCS Advanced Technologies and Care Models in Oncology Surgical Oncology Unit Reggio Emilia Italy

2. Department of Medicine and Surgery University of Parma Parma Italy

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionColonic Diverticular Disease (CDD) is a multifactorial inflammatory disease. Acute diverticulitis (AD), with extraluminal free air (both pericolic and distant), represents about 15% of radiological scenarios and remains a therapeutic challenge for surgeons. Currently, the WSES guidelines suggest trying a conservative strategy both in the presence of pericolic and distant free extraluminal air, even if both have respectively weak recommendation based on low/very low‐quality evidence.MethodsWe performed a systematic review following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyzes guidelines. PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase databases were used to identify articles of interest.ResultsA total of 2380 patients with AD and extraluminal free air (both pericolic and distant) who underwent nonoperative management (NOM) were analyzed. Of the 2380 patients, 2095(88%) were successfully treated with NOM, while 285 (12%) patients failed. A total of 1574 (93.1%) patients with pericolic extraluminal free air had a successful NOM with 6.9% (117) failure rates, while 135 (71.1%) patients with distant extraluminal free air had a successful NOM with 28.9% (55) failure rates. Regarding distant recurrence, we recorded a rate of 18.3% (261/1430), while a rate of 11.3% (167/1472) was recorded for patients undergoing elective surgery.ConclusionNOM for patients with AD and extraluminal free air (both pericolic and distant) seems to be feasible and safe despite a higher failure rate in the distant subgroup, which remains the most challenging clinical scenario to deal with through conservative treatment.

Publisher

Wiley

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