Morbidity of Rectal Prolapse Repair After Surgery for Anorectal Malformation
Timestops (6)
Tools Used
Topic Overview
Megan A. Read, Liese C.C. Pruitt, Brenna Rachwal, Kristine L. Griffina, Richard J. Wood, Alessandra C. Gasio
Purpose
Rectal prolapse is a known complication of surgery for anorectal malformations (ARM), however morbidity of prolapse repair and long-term outcomes are not well-described.
Methods
We performed a single-institution retrospective review of patients who underwent surgery for ARM then were treated for rectal prolapse at our institution from 2014 to 2024. Demographics, clinical characteristics, and surgical outcomes were assessed, and compared using Chi-squared or Fisher's exact testing.
Results
Of the 1275 patients with ARM treated at our institution during this period, 85 patients with previously repaired ARM underwent rectal prolapse repair (54 males, 63.53 %). Median age at initial surgery for rectal prolapse was 3 years (IQR 1.25–6.50). Median follow-up duration was 4 years (IQR 1.50–6.00). Recurrent prolapse requiring repeat repair occurred in 26 patients (30.59 %). Clinically significant post-operative stricture was identified in 27 patients (31.76 %), of whom 24 underwent Heineke-Mikulicz stricturoplasty (88.89 %). Patients who developed stricture were significantly more likely to have been asymptomatic from their prolapse on initial presentation compared to patients who did not develop stricture (N = 22, 81.48 % vs N = 32, 55.17 %, p = 0.028). Asymptomatic patients had a stricture rate of 40.74 %, as compared to 16.13 % for symptomatic patients. The presence of an ostomy and undergoing simultaneous ostomy takedown with prolapse repair was significantly associated with recurrent prolapse (p = 0.016), but not post-operative stricture formation (p = 0.769). There was no difference in rates of prolapse recurrence (p = 0.086) or anal stricture formation (p = 0.757) between patients who underwent partial, complete circumferential, or planned two-stage repair of a circumferential prolapse.
Conclusion
Morbidity from post-operative stricture is not an insignificant concern after prolapse repair, and merits close monitoring and follow-up. Judicious patient selection is critical to minimizing morbidity – we propose that asymptomatic patients should be treated expectantly, and that all patients be counseled on the risk of post-operative stricture.
Keywords
Hashtags
Transcript
Did you know nearly 40% of babies who have chest surgery end up with vocal cord paralysis? I'm Lizzie Lee from Cincinnati Children's and this is an article you should know about. This new study followed pediatric patients after thoracic surgery and found that nearly 40% of them developed vocal cord paralysis afterwards. And it's not silent. Every single case had symptoms, sometimes even strider. The biggest risk factors being younger and smaller. In other words, the most fragile babies were also the most at risk. The good news is that the vocal cord paralysis didn't affect how long kids stayed in the hospital or their ability to feed. But the message is clear that this complication is common and we need better ways to prevent it. Let us know what you think in the comments below and stay tuned for more articles that you should know about.