Frontiers in Surgery (Nov 2022)

Post-intubation tracheal lacerations: Risk-stratification and treatment protocol according to morphological classification

  • Giuseppe Cardillo,
  • Giuseppe Cardillo,
  • Sara Ricciardi,
  • Sara Ricciardi,
  • Anna Rita Forcione,
  • Luigi Carbone,
  • Francesco Carleo,
  • Marco Di Martino,
  • Massimo O. Jaus,
  • Salvatore Perdichizzi,
  • Marco Scarci,
  • Alberto Ricci,
  • Raffaele Dello Iacono,
  • Gabriele Lucantoni,
  • Giovanni Galluccio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.1049126
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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BackgroundPost-intubation tracheal laceration (PITL) is a rare condition (0.005% of intubations). The treatment of choice has traditionally been surgical repair. Following our first report in 2010 of treatment protocol tailored to a risk-stratified morphological classification there is now clear evidence that conservative therapy represents the gold standard in the majority of patients. In this paper we aim to validate our risk-stratified treatment protocol through the largest ever reported series of patients.MethodsThis retrospective analysis is based on a prospectively collected series (2003–2020) of 62 patients with PITL, staged and treated according to our revised morphological classification.ResultsFifty-five patients with Level I (#8), II (#36) and IIIA (#11) PITL were successfully treated conservatively. Six patients with Level IIIB injury and 1 patient with Level IV underwent a surgical repair of the trachea. No mortality was reported. Bronchoscopy confirmed complete healing in all patients by day 30. Statistical analysis showed age only to be a risk factor for PITL severity.ConclusionsOur previously proposed risk-stratified morphological classification has been validated as the major tool for defining the type of treatment in PITL.

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