作者
Marco Milone,Sara Vertaldi,Marie Sophie Alfano,Antonino Agrusa,Gabriele Anania,Gian Luca Baiocchi,Pietro Paolo Bianchi,Alberto Biondi,Umberto Bracale,Salvatore Buscemi,Matteo Chiozza,Francesco Corcione,Domenico D’Ugo,Maurizio Degiuli,Giuseppe De Simone,Ugo Elmore,Federica Galli,Giuseppe Giuliani,Pietro Maida,Francesco Maione,Michele Manigrasso,Giampaolo Marte,Stefano Olmi,Stefano Rausei,Rossella Reddavid,Riccardo Rosati,Matteo Uccelli,Giovanni Domenico De Palma,Elisa Cassinotti,Luigi Boni
摘要
Introduction: Despite progressive improvements in technical skills and instruments that have facilitated surgeons performing intracorporeal gastro-jejunal and jejuno-jejunal anastomoses, one of the big challenging tasks is handsewn knot tying. We analysed the better way to fashion a handsewn intracorporeal enterotomy closure after a stapled anastomosis. Methods: All 579 consecutive patients from January 2009 to December 2019 who underwent minimally invasive partial gastrectomy for gastric cancer were retrospectively analysed. Different ways to fashion intracorporeal anastomoses were investigated: robotic versus laparoscopic approach; laparoscopic high definition versus three-dimensional versus 4K technology; single-layer versus double-layer enterotomies. Double-layer enterotomies were analysed layer by layer, comparing running versus interrupted suture; the presence versus absence of deep corner suture; and type of suture thread. Results: Significantly lower rates of bleeding (p = 0.011) and leakage (p = 0.048) from gastro-jejunal anastomosis were recorded in the double-layer group. Barbed suture thread was significantly associated with reduced intraluminal bleeding and leakage rates both in the first (p = 0.042 and p = 0.010) and second layer (p = 0.002 and p = 0.029). Conclusions: Double-layer sutures using barbed suture thread both in first and second layer to fashion enterotomy closure result in lower intraluminal bleeding and anastomotic leak rates.