Are Surgeons Going to Be Left Holding the Bag? Incisional Hernia Repair and Intra-Peritoneal Non-Absorbable Mesh Implant Complications

Author:

Kirkpatrick Andrew W.12ORCID,Coccolini Federico3,Tolonen Matti4ORCID,Minor Samual5,Catena Fausto6ORCID,Celotti Andrea7,Gois Emanuel8ORCID,Perrone Gennaro9ORCID,Novelli Giuseppe10,Garulli Gianluca11ORCID,Ioannidis Orestis12ORCID,Sugrue Michael13ORCID,De Simone Belinda14ORCID,Tartaglia Dario15,Lampella Hanna16,Ferreira Fernando17,Ansaloni Luca18,Parry Neil G.19,Colak Elif20ORCID,Podda Mauro21ORCID,Noceroni Luigi11,Vallicelli Carlo6ORCID,Rezende-Netos Joao22,Ball Chad G.23,McKee Jessica2,Moore Ernest E.24ORCID,Mather Jack23

Affiliation:

1. Regional Trauma Services, Department of Surgery, Critical Care Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 2T9, Canada

2. TeleMentored Ultrasound Supported Medical Interventions (TMUSMI) Research Group, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T3H 3W8, Canada

3. General, Emergency and Trauma Surgery Department, Pisa University Hospital, 56124 Pisa, Italy

4. Emergency Surgery Department, HUS Helsinki University Hospital, 00029 Helsinki, Finland

5. Department of Surgery and Critical Care Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada

6. Head Emergency and General Surgery Department, Bufalini Hospital, 47521 Cesena, Italy

7. Surgery Department, ASST Cremona, 26100 Cremona, Italy

8. Department of Surgery, Londrina State University, Londrina 86038-350, Brazil

9. Department of Emergency Surgery, Parma University Hospital, 43125 Parma, Italy

10. Chiurgia Generale e d’Urgenza, Osepedale Buffalini Hospital, 47521 Cesna, Italy

11. Hospital Infermi Rimini, 47923 Rimini, Italy

12. 4th Department of Surgery, Medical School, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, General Hospital “George Papanikolaou”, 57010 Thessaloniki, Greece

13. Letterkenny University Hospital, F92 AE81 Donegal, Ireland

14. Unit of Emergency Minimally Invasive Surgery, Academic Hospital of Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, 91560 Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, France

15. Emergency and General Surgery Unit, New Santa Chiara Hospital, University of Pisa, 56126 Pisa, Italy

16. Gastrointestinal Surgery Unit, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki University, 00100 Helsinki, Finland

17. GI Surgery and Complex Abdominal Wall Unit, Hospital CUF Porto, Faculty of Medicine of the Oporto University, 4200-319 Porto, Portugal

18. San Matteo Hospital of Pavia, University of Pavia, 27100 Pavia, Italy

19. Department of Surgery and Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, ON N6A 3K7, Canada

20. Samsun Training and Research Hospital, University of Samsun, 55000 Samsun, Turkey

21. Department of Surgical Science, University of Cagliari, 09124 Cagliari, Italy

22. Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, General Surgery, St. Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5T 1P8, Canada

23. Acute Care, and Hepatobiliary Surgery and Regional Trauma Services, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada

24. Ernest E Moore Shock Trauma Center at Denver Health, Denver, CO 80204, USA

Abstract

Ventral incisional hernias are common indications for elective repair and frequently complicated by recurrence. Surgical meshes, which may be synthetic, bio-synthetic, or biological, decrease recurrence and, resultingly, their use has become standard. While most patients are greatly benefited, mesh represents a permanently implanted foreign body. Mesh may be implanted within the intra-peritoneal, preperitoneal, retrorectus, inlay, or onlay anatomic positions. Meshes may be associated with complications that may be early or late and range from minor to severe. Long-term complications with intra-peritoneal synthetic mesh (IPSM) in apposition to the viscera are particularly at risk for adhesions and potential enteric fistula formation. The overall rate of such complications is difficult to appreciate due to poor long-term follow-up data, although it behooves surgeons to understand these risks as they are the ones who implant these devices. All surgeons need to be aware that meshes are commercial devices that are delivered into their operating room without scientific evidence of efficacy or even safety due to the unique regulatory practices that distinguish medical devices from medications. Thus, surgeons must continue to advocate for more stringent oversight and improved scientific evaluation to serve our patients properly and protect the patient–surgeon relationship as the only rationale long-term strategy to avoid ongoing complications.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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