Emergency umbilical hernia management: scoping review

Author:

Walshaw Josephine12ORCID,Kuligowska Anna1,Smart Neil J3,Blencowe Natalie S14,Lee Matthew J156ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Leeds Institute of Emergency General Surgery, St James’s University Hospital , Leeds , UK

2. Leeds Institute of Medical Research, St James’s University Hospital, University of Leeds , Leeds , UK

3. Department of Colorectal Surgery, Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust , Exeter , UK

4. Bristol Centre for Surgical Research, Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol , Bristol , UK

5. Institute for Applied Health Research, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham , Birmingham , UK

6. Department of Trauma and Emergency General Surgery, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust , Birmingham , UK

Abstract

Abstract Background Umbilical hernias, while frequently asymptomatic, may become acutely symptomatic, strangulated or obstructed, and require emergency treatment. Robust evidence is required for high-quality care in this field. This scoping review aims to elucidate evidence gaps regarding emergency care of umbilical hernias. Methods EMBASE, MEDLINE and CENTRAL databases were searched using a predefined strategy until November 2023. Primary research studies reporting on any aspect of emergency umbilical hernia care and published in the English language were eligible for inclusion. Studies were excluded where emergency umbilical hernia care was not the primary focus and subsets of relevant data were unable to be extracted. Two independent reviewers screened abstracts and full texts, resolving disagreements by consensus or a third reviewer. Data were charted according to core concepts addressed by each study and a narrative synthesis was performed. Results Searches generated 534 abstracts, from which 32 full texts were assessed and 14 included in the final review. This encompassed 52 042 patients undergoing emergency umbilical hernia care. Most were retrospective cohort designs (11/14), split between single (6/14) and multicentre (8/14) with only one randomized trial. Most multicentre studies were from national databases (7/8). Themes arising included risk assessment (n = 4), timing of surgery (n = 4), investigations (n = 1), repair method (n = 8, four mesh versus suture; four laparoscopic versus open) and operative outcomes (n = 11). The most commonly reported outcomes were mortality (n = 9) and morbidity (n = 7) rates and length of hospital stay (n = 5). No studies included patient-reported outcomes specific to emergency umbilical hernia repair. Conclusion This scoping review demonstrates the paucity of high-quality data for this condition. There is a need for randomized trials addressing all aspects of emergency umbilical hernia repair, with patient-reported outcomes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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1. Small bowel obstruction;British Journal of Surgery;2024-07

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