Affiliation:
1. N.N. Alexandrov Republican Research and Practical Center for Oncology and Medical Radiology
Abstract
Background. Surgical morbidities of radical cystectomy, which are, as a rule, complicated intraabdominal infections, appear to be the main causes of repeated surgeries and fatal outcomes. The elimination of the infection Indus and an-timicrobic therapy are the currently accepted standard of treatment for postoperative peritonitis in cancer urology, as well as in general surgery hospital.Objective: defining the most reasonable option of surgical aid for peritonitis developing after cystectomy.Materials and methods. In the time period from 2000 through 2014, 58 cancer patients with postoperative peritonitis developing after cystectomy received indoor treatment at N.N. Alexandrov Republican Research and Practical Center for Oncology and Medical Radiology. Their mean age was 64.9 years, the range 44-90 years, 53 (91.4 %) of them being male. Primary urinary bladder cancer was present in 51 (87.9 %) patients. Peritoneal infection was microbiologically verified in 57 (98.3 %) patients. Each case of fatal outcome was associated with ineffective treatment of peritonitis. Depending on the intraoperative findings (presence or absence of a hollow organ defect) and the surgical approach undertaken (obstructive resection or operation maintaining the continuity of the intestinal and/or urinary tract), the patients were stratified into three groups: group 1 (n = 28), group 2 (n = 20) and group 3 (n = 10). There were no significant differences in the basic parameters specifying peritoneal infection severity between the patients of groups 1 and 2 vs group 3 (p >0.05).Results. Overall mortality amounted to 25.9 %, 15 patients died. Among the 28 (48.3 %) patients (group 1) who underwent obstructive elimination of the peritonitis focus by means of urointestinal reservoir ablation, resection of small or large intestine with ileo- or colostomy, 6 patients died, mortality 21.4 %. In the 10 (17.2 %) patients (group 3) who succeeded in preserving the urinary conduit or continuity of the bowels by anastomosis defect closure, resection of enteroentero-anastomosis or urointestinal reservoir with repeated anastomosing or defect closure, mortality was higher (60 %) (p = 0.045); 6 patients died.Conclusion. The most effective option of surgical treatment of postoperative peritonitis developing after cystectomy is obstructive reoperation on the bowels and urinary tracts: compared with the intervention consisting in preserving the urinary conduit and/or continuity of the intestinal tract, this type of surgery caused a 2.8-fold lower mortality.
Publisher
Publishing House ABV Press
Subject
Urology,Nephrology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology,Surgery
Cited by
1 articles.
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