Reuters Health Information: Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt does not improve colectomy outcomes
Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt does not improve colectomy outcomes
Last Updated: 2015-01-09
By Reuters Staff
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Transjugular intrahepatic
portosystemic shunt (TIPS) does not improve colectomy outcomes
in patients with concomitant primary sclerosing cholangitis
(PSC) and ulcerative colitis, according to results from a
retrospective study.
Patients with PSC and ulcerative colitis face a high risk of
colon cancer, but colectomy in these patients may be associated
with major complication rates as high as 27%.
Some have suggested that TIPS prior to abdominal surgery in
PSC patients with cirrhosis can improve surgical outcomes, but
studies have yielded conflicting results.
Dr. Bo Shen from The Cleveland Clinic in Ohio and colleagues
investigated whether TIPS prior to colectomy in patients who
have both PSC and ulcerative colitis alters the rates of
postoperative complications in a retrospective case-control
study of 50 patients, 9 of whom received TIPS before their
colectomy.
Patients who had TIPS before surgery experienced several
complications with greater frequency, compared with the 37
patients who did not have TIPS before colectomy, according to
the article published online December 16 in Gastroenterology
Report.
The TIPS group had significantly more intraoperative
bleeding that required blood transfusions, more wound
infections, a higher risk of wound dehiscence, and a higher
chance of readmission within 30 days than did the non-TIPS
group.
Postoperative mortality, however, did not differ between the
groups.
There were several significant differences between the
groups that could have contributed to the worse outcomes. The
TIPS group had higher median Mayo Risk Scores, lower mean
albumin levels, higher total bilirubin levels, lower hemoglobin
and platelet levels, higher international normal ratio values,
and longer activated partial thromboplastin time.
"Our findings suggest that the cause was not the presence of
TIPS, but rather that patients in the Study group had more
severe cirrhosis, which made both TIPS placement and
post-colectomy complications more likely," the researchers say.
It remains to be seen, then, whether TIPS placement itself
exacerbates or diminishes surgical complications.
"Based on our initial findings," the authors conclude,
"prospective tracking of patients with PSC and ulcerative
colitis undergoing colectomy following TIPS may be warranted."
Dr. Shen did not respond to a request for comments.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Kt6sXF
Gastroenterol Rep 2014
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