Author/Authors :
Mehmet Ozgun, Yigit Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey , Kadri Colakoglu, Muhammet Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey , Oter, Volkan Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey , Piskin, Erol Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey , Aydin, Osman Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey , Aksoy, Erol Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey , Bostanci, Erdal Birol Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey
Abstract :
This study was conducted retrospectively on data from 820 cases of pancreaticoduodenectomy performed in the Gastrointestinal Surgery Department of Ankara City Hospital between April 1999 and August 2019. Twenty years of collected patient data were re-examined and 805 patients were divided into two groups as those who underwent preoperative biliary drainage (PBD) and those who did not (non-PBD). Demographic data of patients, and preoperative, operative and postoperative details, including morbidity, were collected and compared between the two groups.
Results: There were 574 (71.3%) patients in the PBD group and 231 (28.6%) patients in the non-PBD group. Total complications according to Clavien-Dindo classification were significantly higher in the PBD group (P<0.001). Intraabdominal hemorrhage, delayed gastric emptying and wound infection were found to be higher in the PBD group but the rate of pancreatic fistula was similar in both groups. There was no difference between the two groups in terms of complications according to preoperative bilirubin levels. In drained patients with normal bilirubin levels, wound infections were significantly higher in a group with diameter of common bile duct>8 mm (P=0.020).
Conclusion: PBD is not associated with anastomotic leakage after pancreaticoduodenectomy. Wound infection, delayed gastric emptying and intraabdominal hemorrhage were significantly associated with PBD. Preoperative bilirubin level had no effect on these results. In subgroup analysis, in patients undergoing drainage, if bilirubin falls below 5 mg/dL, the risk of wound infection was still high in patients with bile duct diameter>8 mm.
Keywords :
Cholangiopancreatography , Pancreatic Neoplasms , Pancreaticoduodenectomy , Endoscopic Retrograde , Cholangiopancreatography