Heliyon (Feb 2024)

An integrated strategy for reducing anastomotic leakage in patients undergoing McKeown esophagectomy

  • Yan Zhang,
  • Junya Wang,
  • Shuang Ren,
  • Jia Jiao,
  • Zheng Ding,
  • Hang Yang,
  • Dabo Pan,
  • Jindong Li,
  • Guoqing Zhang,
  • Xiangnan Li,
  • Song Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e26430

Abstract

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Objective: To describe our experience of reducing anastomotic leakage, a problem that has not been properly solved. Methods: Starting in January 2020, we began implementing our integrated strategy (application of an esophageal diameter-approximated slender gastric tube, preservation of the fibrous tissue around the residual esophagus and thyroid inferior pole anastomosis) in consecutive patients undergoing esophagectomy without a nasogastric tube or a nasal-jejunum feeding tube. Additionally, the blood supply at the site of the anastomosis was evaluated with a near-infrared fluorescence thoracoscope after the completion of esophagogastric anastomosis in the integrated strategy group. Results: Of 570 patients who were reviewed, 119 (20.9%) underwent the integrated strategy, and 451 (79.1%) underwent the conventional strategy. The rate of anastomotic leakage was 2.5% in the integrated strategy group and 10.2% in the conventional strategy group (p = 0.008). In the integrated strategy group, the site of most of the anastomotic blood supply was the residual esophagus dominant (82.4%), followed by the gastroesophageal dual-dominant (12.6%) and the gastric tube dominant (5.0%). The reconstruction route was more likely to be orthotopic in the integrated strategy group than in the conventional strategy group (89.9% vs. 38.6%, p = 0.004). Gastric dilation was identified in 3.4% of the patients in the integrated strategy group and in 21.1% in the conventional strategy group. Conclusions: Patients who underwent our proposed integrated strategy (Zhengzhou Strategy) during McKeown esophagectomy without a nasogastric tube or a nasal-jejunum feeding tube had a strikingly lower rate of anastomotic leakage and a relatively lower rate of postoperative complications, such as gastric tube dilation and delayed gastric emptying.

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