Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2023)

Role of Absorbable Polysaccharide Hemostatic Powder in the Prevention of Bleeding and Wound Events after Thyroid Surgery

  • Giovanni Docimo,
  • Marcello Filograna Pignatelli,
  • Sonia Ferrandes,
  • Alessandro Monaco,
  • Francesco Calisti,
  • Roberto Ruggiero,
  • Salvatore Tolone,
  • Francesco Saverio Lucido,
  • Luigi Brusciano,
  • Simona Parisi,
  • Giovanni Conzo,
  • Ludovico Docimo,
  • Claudio Gambardella

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12175684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 17
p. 5684

Abstract

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Background: Bleeding is one of the most fearsome and life-threatening complications after thyroid surgery. Several medical devices and haemostatic agents have been proposed to improve haemostasis during total and hemi-thyroidectomy. Resorbable polysaccharide powder (HaemoCer™) is a plant-based polymer that is helpful in terms of the coagulation cascade becoming a gel and forming a barrier to prevent further bleeding, having tested for haemostasis in different districts. The aim of the current study was the evaluation of drain output, the presence of significant postoperative blood loss and complications in patients treated with or without resorbable polysaccharide powder during thyroid surgery. Methods: From January to December 2022, postoperative bleeding, drainage output and the postoperative wound events of patients undergoing thyroid surgery, in a tertiary centre, with haemostasis completion with resorbable polysaccharide powder (Group A) or not (Group B), were retrospectively analysed. Results: Eighty-one patients in Group A received a haemostasis improvement with the use of reabsorbable polysaccharide powder, and 96 patients in Group B received thyroid surgery alone. Patients in Group A presented lower drainage output (0.005), lower incidence of neck haematoma (0.005) and seroma (0.021), confirmed also by multivariate analysis. Conclusions: The resorbable polysaccharide powder, in the current series, appeared to be an effective agent in achieving haemostasis in thyroidectomies, reducing the postoperative drainage output, and also neck events such as neck haematoma and seroma, improving the postoperative comfort of the patients. Further larger comparative studies are needed to address this issue.

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