Fujita Medical Journal (Nov 2021)
Transumbilical single-incision laparoscopic appendectomy with extracorporeal hand-sewn stump closure in adult patients
Abstract
Objectives: We evaluated the clinical outcomes of transumbilical single-incision laparoscopic appendectomy with extracorporeal hand-sewn stump closure in adults. Methods: One-hundred-and-thirty-one consecutive adults with acute appendicitis were treated with the intention of performing transumbilical single-incision laparoscopic appendectomy with extracorporeal hand-sewn stump closure from July 2012 to December 2017. The procedure completion rate and outcomes were examined. To evaluate the risk factors for conversion, the background data were compared between the patients in whom the procedure was completed versus those in whom the procedure was uncompleted. Results: The procedure was completed in 113 of 131 patients (86.3%). Single-site surgery was completed in 117 patients (89.3%). The median operation time was 79 (range 30–270) minutes and median intraoperative blood loss was 10 (range 0–394) ml. Postoperative complications occurred in 17 patients (13.0%). Postoperative hospital stay was 6 (range 1–27) days. The 18 patients in whom the procedure could not be completed comprised four patients in whom the stapler was used for intraabdominal stump closure, and 14 patients who were converted to multiport laparoscopic surgery or open surgery. Multivariate analysis showed that the independent risk factors for conversion were age, preoperative abscess, and peri-appendiceal fat density. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed that the cutoff value of peri-appendiceal fat density for conversion was –40.51 Hounsfield units. Conclusions: Transumbilical single-incision laparoscopic appendectomy with extracorporeal hand-sewn stump closure was safe in adults with acute appendicitis. The risk factors for conversion were age ≥60 years, preoperative abscess, and peri-appendiceal fat density ≥–40.51 Hounsfield units.
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