Skip to main content
Erschienen in: Techniques in Coloproctology 10/2023

Open Access 17.07.2023 | Review

Efficacy of different surgical treatments for management of anal fistula: a network meta-analysis

verfasst von: S. Bhat, W. Xu, C. Varghese, N. Dubey, C. I. Wells, C. Harmston, G. O’Grady, I. P. Bissett, A. Y. Lin

Erschienen in: Techniques in Coloproctology | Ausgabe 10/2023

Abstract

Purpose

Currently, the anal fistula treatment which optimises healing and preserves bowel continence remains unclear. The aim of our study was to compare the relative efficacy of different surgical treatments for AF through a network meta-analysis.

Methods

Systematic searches of MEDLINE, EMBASE and CENTRAL databases up to October 2022 identified randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing surgical treatments for anal fistulae. Fistulae were classified as simple (inter-sphincteric or low trans-sphincteric fistulae crossing less than 30% of the external anal sphincter (EAS)) and complex (high trans-sphincteric fistulae involving more than 30% of the EAS). Treatments evaluated in only one trial were excluded from the primary analyses to minimise bias. The primary outcomes were rates of success in achieving AF healing and bowel incontinence.

Results

Fifty-two RCTs were included. Of the 14 treatments considered, there were no significant differences regarding short-term (6 months or less postoperatively) and long-term (more than 6 months postoperatively) success rates between any of the treatments in patients with both simple and complex anal fistula. Ligation of the inter-sphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) ranked best for minimising bowel incontinence in simple (99.1% of comparisons; 3 trials, n = 70 patients) and complex anal fistula (86.2% of comparisons; 3 trials, n = 102 patients).

Conclusions

There is insufficient evidence in existing RCTs to recommend one treatment over another regarding their short and long-term efficacy in successfully facilitating healing of both simple and complex anal fistulae. However, LIFT appears to be associated with the least impairment of bowel continence, irrespective of AF classification.
Hinweise

Supplementary Information

The online version contains supplementary material available at https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​s10151-023-02845-8.

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Introduction

Anal fistula is a pathological connection between the anal canal and perianal skin, which can cause severe pain, perianal swelling, bleeding, and purulent discharge [13]. Although new strategies for classifying anal fistula have been proposed [4], fistulae are commonly categorised as “simple” and “complex” on the basis of their anatomical course relative to the external anal sphincter (EAS) [5]. Simple anal fistula include inter-sphincteric or low trans-sphincteric fistulae, which cross less than 30% of the EAS [2, 6]. Complex anal fistula include high trans-sphincteric fistulae, which have greater than 30% involvement of the EAS, supra-sphincteric, extra-sphincteric, or horseshoe fistulae, fistulae with secondary tracts, anterior fistulae (in women), or those associated with inflammatory bowel disease, radiation, malignancy, pre-existing faecal incontinence and chronic diarrhoea [5, 7].
Surgical management of anal fistula is decided on the basis of patient factors as well as anatomical complexity relative to the EAS [8]. Anal fistulotomy is effective for managing simple anal fistula, although it places patients at risk of bowel incontinence due to partial or complete division of the anal sphincter complex [9, 10]. For this reason, several sphincter-preserving treatments have been developed, particularly for complex anal fistula. These include loose setons [11], fibrin glue [12], collagen plug [13, 14], anorectal advancement flap [1517], ligation of the inter-sphincteric fistula tract [1820], fistula laser closure [21] and, more recently, mesenchymal adipose-derived stem cell injections [2224]. These treatments are associated with less impairment of bowel function, although their healing rates vary considerably. Consensus regarding which treatment reliably provides the highest rate of healing whilst also preserving bowel continence is lacking.
Network meta-analysis (NMA) allows for a coherent ranking of multiple treatments through direct comparisons, using evidence presented in several randomised controlled trials (RCTs), and statistically derived indirect comparisons [25, 26]. The aim of this study was therefore to compare the relative efficacy between different surgical treatments for simple and complex anal fistula through a NMA, which could assist surgeons in counselling patients about the risks and benefits of each treatment and in deciding on the most suitable option for managing anal fistula.

Methods

The protocol for this review was prospectively recorded on PROSPERO (ID CRD42021288310) [27]. The study was performed in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, with extension for NMA (the PRISMA-NMA checklist is shown in Supplementary Appendix 1) [28].

Search strategy

The MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Controlled Register of Trials (CENTRAL) databases were systematically searched in December 2021, with results updated to October 2022. Boolean operators (“AND”/“OR”) were used to combine keywords and Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) for different anal fistula treatments (Supplementary Appendix S2).

Study selection

All RCTs comparing at least two surgical treatments in patients undergoing elective surgery for managing anal fistula were eligible for inclusion. Simple anal fistula included inter-sphincteric and low trans-sphincteric fistula crossing less than 30% of the EAS, and complex anal fistula included high trans-sphincteric fistulae (involving more than 30% of the EAS), supra-sphincteric, extra-sphincteric, or horseshoe fistulae, fistulae with secondary tracts, anterior fistulae (in women), and fistulae secondary to pre-existing faecal incontinence [5]. For the purposes of our analyses, recurrent anal fistula were classified as either simple or complex according to their anatomical course and/or characteristics. Studies were restricted to those conducted in human, adult patients (at least 18 years old), although there were no restrictions on publication date or language. One investigator (WX) was able to translate relevant non-English studies to facilitate their inclusion in the final review [29, 30]. Titles/abstracts and potentially relevant full-texts were independently reviewed after removal of duplicate records [31, 32], with any discrepancies settled by discussion and with input from senior authors as required.
Studies with non-randomised designs (e.g. prospective/retrospective cohort studies, case–control studies, case series and case reports), where anal fistulae were managed nonoperatively, and those conducted in paediatric patients (less than 18 years old) or in patients with anal fistula secondary to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), radiation, malignancy, and chronic diarrhoea, were excluded. Editorial letters, book chapters, conference abstracts, and trial protocols were also excluded, as were records in which the full text could not be sourced. Reference lists of relevant reviews were screened to identify additional studies, although the studies themselves were excluded.

Data extraction

Extracted data included information on study characteristics (first author, publication year, trial location, treatment comparisons, follow-up period), patient demographic characteristics (number of patients randomised and subsequently treated, age, sex), and anal fistula characteristics (simple versus complex classification, location, and length of the tract). Accuracy of these data were validated by two reviewers independently (WX, CV). Any inconsistencies in the data were resolved via discussion and with mediation by a senior author if necessary.
Corresponding authors were contacted to resolve instances of ambiguous data [33]. Estimates of the mean and standard deviation (SD) were derived for continuous data reported as the median and range (or interquartile range) using validated methods [3436]. WebPlotDigitizer (Version 4.5; Pacifica, California, USA) was used to extract data that were reported in the form of graphs and/or figures [37].

Quality assessment

The Cochrane Collaboration’s Risk of Bias 2.0 (ROB2) tool was used by three reviewers to independently evaluate the methodological quality of included RCTs (SB, WX, ND) [38]. Discrepancies in study quality were discussed between the reviewers until consensus was reached.

Outcome measures

The main outcomes were rates of success and bowel incontinence. Success was defined as complete healing of the anal fistula without recurrence or persistence of symptoms on follow-up, and was measured in the short term (6 months or less after surgery) and long term (more than 6 months after surgery). Healing was defined on the basis of clinical examination, and/or endoanal ultrasound scan (USS) or pelvic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings, or was self-reported by patients on the basis of the resolution of symptoms at follow-up. Bowel incontinence was defined as incontinence to either gas, liquid and/or solid stool. Secondary outcomes included hospital length of stay (LOS) and overall postoperative complication rates. These outcomes were analysed separately for patients with simple and complex anal fistula.

Statistical analysis

An intention-to-treat Bayesian NMA with a non-informative prior distribution was performed in RStudio (Version 4.2.2; Posit PBC, Boston, Massachusetts, USA).
All direct treatment comparisons were visually represented through network plots for each outcome. The size of each node correlated with the number of patients randomised to each treatment, and the thickness of each line connecting two nodes was proportional to the number of RCTs comparing those two treatments. Fistulectomy was used as the reference treatment for comparisons in simple anal fistulae, while advancement flap was used in cases of complex anal fistulae. Continuity corrections of one were applied to both the numerator and denominator of each treatment arm to facilitate inclusion of categorical outcomes with zero observed events [39]. Effect sizes were reported as the log OR for categorical outcomes [40, 41], and mean difference (MD) for continuous outcomes, with their respective 95% credible interval (CrI). Differences were considered statistically significant if the 95% CrI did not cross zero (the no-effect line). Treatments assessed in only one trial, which were not connected to at least two treatments through the network, were excluded from the primary analysis to minimise bias resulting from single-trial effects. For each outcome, results were illustrated through a rankogram plot, surface under the cumulative ranking (SUCRA) curve, heat plot, and forest plot. Rankograms were used to visualise the relative effectiveness of each treatment as stacked bar plots representing the probability of each intervention to achieve each rank. SUCRA curves illustrate the relative ranking probability (i.e. SUCRA values) of each intervention; the horizontal axis is the probability a treatment would fall within that rank [42]. SUCRA values ranged from 0 to 100%, with higher values indicating a greater probability of being the best performing treatment for a particular outcome [43]. Heat plots were used to illustrate the effect size (OR or MD with their corresponding 95% CrI) for each treatment compared with one another, while forest plots were used to display the effect size of each treatment relative to a treatment of reference [42]. The I2 statistic was used to quantify the percentage of total variability in effect size across trials that is attributable to true heterogeneity rather than chance, and was calculated for each direct comparison of treatments [44].
For NMA results to be valid, the conditions of consistency and transitivity must be maintained. Consistency refers to the assumption that effect sizes derived from indirect and direct comparisons are similar [45, 46]. Transitivity refers to the assumption that potential modifiers of treatment effect sizes are equally distributed across all RCTs [45]. This was assessed by comparing demographic data (e.g. age and sex) of patients randomised to each treatment, and geographic study location(s) between the different treatments analysed.

Sensitivity analysis

Sensitivity analyses were performed by assessing all treatments, to examine the impact of bias introduced when treatments were analysed in only a single study.

Results

Search results

Database searches identified 703 records, from which 52 RCTs were included (Fig. 1 and Supplementary Appendix S3). Five RCTs were excluded on the basis of their inclusion of patients with anal fistula secondary to IBD [4751].

Study characteristics

Characteristics of the included studies are detailed in Table 1. The highest proportion of trials were conducted in China (19%, 10/52), followed by Egypt (13%, 7/52) and Spain (12%, 6/52). There were eight multicentre RCTs, including a median of 6 (IQR 5–16) hospitals; it was unclear how many hospitals were included in one study [52].
Table 1
Summary characteristics of included randomised controlled trials
First author (year)
Geographic location(s)
No. of centres
Anal fistula classification
Treatment
No. of patientsa
A ba-bai-ke-re (2010) [83]
China
1
Complex
Collagen plug
45 (45)
Advancement flap
45 (45)
A ba-bai-ke-re (2012) [53]
China
1
Complex
Collagen plug with seton
20 (20)
Seton
20 (20)
Al Sebai (2021) [92]
Egypt
1
Simple
LIFT
15 (15)
Fistulotomy
15 (15)
Altomare (2011) [54]
Italy
7
Complex
Collagen plug
39 (38)
Seton
25 (24)
Anan (2019) [93]
Egypt
1
Simple
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
31 (30)
Fistulotomy
31 (30)
Bondi (2017) [55]
Norway, Sweden
3
Complex
Collagen plug
48 (41)
Advancement flap
46 (40)
Chalya (2013) [94]
Tanzania
1
Simple
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
80 (80)
Fistulotomy
82 (82)
Chen (2005) [29]
China
1
Complex
Seton
96 (96)
Fistulectomy
96 (96)
Cwalinski (2021) [56]
Poland
1
Complex
Topical platelet-rich plasma following fistula drainage
10 (10)
Topical platelet-rich plasma
8 (8)
de la Portilla (2019) [57]
Spain
1
Complex
Topical platelet-rich plasma
32 (29)
Fibrin glue
24 (21)
Dong (2020) [81]
China
1
Simple
LIFT
45 (45)
Fistulectomy
45 (45)
Ellis (2006) [58]
USA
1
Complex
Advancement flap with collagen plug
28 (28)
Advancement flap
30 (30)
Elshamy (2022) [101]
Egypt
1
Complex
LIFT
25 (22)
Modified fistulotomy
25 (21)
Seton
25 (23)
Filingeri (2004) [59]
Italy
1
Simple
Radiofrequency fistulectomy
11 (10)
Fistulotomy
11 (10)
Garcia-Arranz (2020) [84]
Spain
5
Complex
Adipose-derived stem cells with collagen plug
23 (20)
Fibrin glue
21 (19)
Garcia-Olmo (2009) [85]
Spain
1
Complex
Adipose-derived stem cells with collagen plug
24 (24)
Fibrin glue
25 (25)
Goudar (2020) [60]
India
1
Simple
LIFT
30 (30)
Fistulectomy
30 (30)
Gupta (2003) [61]
India
1
Simple
Radiofrequency fistulotomy
50 (50)
Fistulotomy
50 (50)
Hammond (2009) [86]
UK
1
Complex
Collagen plug
13 (13)
Fibrin glue
16 (15)
Han (2016) [62]
China
5
Complex
LIFT with collagen plug
119 (117)
LIFT
120 (118)
Hermann (2022) [63]
Poland
1
Complex
Topical platelet-rich plasma
49 (49)
Advancement flap
47 (47)
Herreros (2012) [64]
Spain
19
Complex
Adipose-derived stem cells with fibrin glue
66 (60)
Adipose-derived stem cells
68 (64)
Fibrin glue
66 (59)
Ho (1998) [95]
Singapore
1
Simple
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
51 (51)
Fistulotomy
52 (52)
Ho (2001) [65]
Singapore
1
Simple
Seton
46 (46)
Fistulotomy
54 (54)
Ho (2005) [52]
Singapore
NS
Simple
Advancement flap
10 (10)
Fistulotomy
10 (10)
Jain (2012) [96]
India
1
Simple
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
20 (20)
Fistulectomy
20 (20)
Kalim (2017) [66]
Pakistan
1
Simple
Fistulectomy
152 (152)
Fistulotomy
152 (152)
Khoshnevis (2022) [79]
Iran
1
Complex
“JUMP” techniqueb
65 (65)
Seton
65 (65)
Kronborg (1985) [97]
Denmark
1
Simple
Fistulotomy
26 (26)
Fistulectomy
21 (21)
Kumar (2022) [87]
India
1
Complex
Advancement flap
42 (42)
LIFT
42 (42)
Madbouly (2014) [91]
Egypt
1
Complex
LIFT
35 (35)
Advancement flap
35 (35)
Madbouly (2021) [67]
Egypt
1
Complex
LIFT with topical platelet-rich plasma
49 (49)
LIFT
49 (49)
Mascagni (2018) [68]
Italy
1
Simple
Incision-thread drawing
15 (15)
Fistulectomy with primary sphincter reconstruction
15 (15)
Mushaya (2012) [88]
Australia
1
Complex
LIFT
25 (25)
Advancement flap
14 (13)
Nazeer (2012) [98]
Pakistan
1
Simple
Fistulectomy
75 (75)
Fistulotomy
75 (75)
Nour (2020) [100]
Egypt
1
Simple
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
35 (35)
Fistulotomy
35 (35)
Ortiz (2009) [80]
Spain
1
Complex
Collagen plug
16 (15)
Advancement flap
16 (16)
Perez (2006) [69]
Spain
1
Complex
Advancement flap
27 (27)
Fistulotomy with primary sphincter reconstruction
28 (28)
Pescatori (2006) [70]
Italy
1
Complex
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
22 (22)
Fistulectomy
24 (24)
Rezk (2022) [71]
Egypt
1
Simple
LIFT with adipose-derived stem cells
35 (35)
LIFT
35 (35)
Sahakitrungruang (2011) [72]
Thailand
1
Simple
Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
25 (25)
Fistulotomy
25 (25)
Schwandner (2018) [89]
Germany
6
Complex
Collagen plug
43 (33)
Advancement flap
39 (33)
Singer (2005) [73]
USA
16
Complex
Fibrin glue with antibiotics
24 (24)
Fibrin glue with fistula closure surgery
25 (25)
Fibrin glue with antibiotics followed by fistula closure surgery
26 (26)
Sørensen (2021) [74]
Denmark
1
Complex
Fistulectomy with primary sphincter reconstruction
22 (22)
Video-assisted anal fistula treatment
23 (23)
van der Hagen (2011) [90]
Netherlands
1
Complex
Fibrin glue
15 (15)
Advancement flap
15 (15)
van Koperen (2011) [75]
Netherlands
6
Simple
Collagen plug
31 (31)
Advancement flap
29 (29)
Vinay (2017) [99]
India
1
Simple
LIFT
25 (25)
Fistulotomy
25 (25)
Wang (2012) [30]
China
1
Complex
Suture dragging with pad compression
30 (30)
Fistulotomy
30 (30)
Wang (2021) [76]
China
1
Simple
Modified fistulotomy
63 (63)
Fistulotomy
62 (62)
Wu (2021) [33]
China
1
Simple
Video-assisted modified LIFT
37 (37)
Incision-thread drawing
30 (30)
Yan (2020) [77]
China
1
Complex
Fistulectomy with seton
40 (40)
Seton
40 (40)
Zhang (2020) [78]
China
1
Complex
Video-assisted anal fistula treatment
37 (37)
Fistulotomy with seton
38 (38)
LIFT ligation of the inter-sphincteric fistula tract, NS not stated
aParenthesis indicate patients who were randomised and received each treatment (i.e. those who were included in the final analyses)
bInversion of the fistula tract

Patient characteristics and treatments comparisons

A total of 4157 patients were randomised, of which 4069 participants were included in the final analyses (1799 with simple and 2270 with complex anal fistula; Table 1). There was substantial heterogeneity in anal fistula definitions across the included trials (Supplementary Appendix S4).
Overall, 33 different surgical treatments were analysed (Table 1). Thirteen different treatments were trialled in the 22 studies including patients with simple anal fistula, while 28 different treatments were analysed in the 30 studies of patients with complex anal fistula.

Quality assessment

The majority of RCTs were assessed as being at high ROB (69.2%, 36/52 studies; Supplementary Fig. S1). This predominantly resulted from biases in how outcomes were measured (63.5%, 33/52) or due to the lack of blinding among patients and/or surgeons (53.8%, 28/52); although in two of these studies, ‘moderate’ rather than high ROB was assigned as outcome assessors remained blinded [79, 80]. Detection bias was low as there were no missing outcome data in all but one study (98.1%, 51/52) [30]. Quality assessments for individual trials based on each of the five ROB domains are reported in Supplementary Fig. S2.

Transitivity analysis

Demographic characteristics (age and sex) of patients randomised to each treatment varied considerably (Supplementary Appendix S5, A & B), with the mean age of patients ranging from 30.4 to 53.1 years old, and proportion of female patients ranging from 0 to 60%. Substantial geographical diversity among the different surgical treatments assessed was also observed (Supplementary Appendix S5, C), with the novel treatments (i.e. which were employed in only a single trial) mostly originating from China, India, Poland, Spain, and Egypt.

Primary outcomes

Short-term success (≤ 6 months after surgery)

Success rates in the short term were reported in two studies of 150 participants with simple anal fistula, in which two treatments were compared: ligation of the inter-sphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) versus fistulectomy (Fig. 2a) [81, 82]. There were no significant differences in rates of success between LIFT and fistulectomy (log OR − 1.2, 95% CrI − 5.7 to 3.4; Fig. 3a–c).
Short-term success of complex anal fistulae was evaluated in eight trials, consisting of 424 participants, in which five different treatments were assessed: collagen plug, advancement flap, LIFT, fibrin glue, and adipose-derived stem cells combined with a collagen plug (Fig. 2b) [8491]. Rates of success of anal fistula healing were not significantly different between any of the treatments (Fig. 4a–d).

Long-term success (> 6 months after surgery)

No trials described long-term success rates for different treatments among participants with simple anal fistulae.
Four trials assessed rates of success in the long-term among 251 participants with complex anal fistula, in which three different treatments were compared: LIFT, advancement flap, and collagen plug (Fig. 2c) [80, 87, 89, 91]. On the available evidence, these three treatments did not differ from one another in terms of their efficacy for achieving long-term success regarding anal fistula healing (Fig. 5a, b). LIFT ranked as the best performing treatment in 92.3% of comparisons (n = 2 trials with 77 participants) (Table 3, Fig. 5c–d).

Bowel incontinence

Rates of bowel incontinence were evaluated in 10 trials, including 772 participants with simple anal fistula, and comparing four different treatments: LIFT, fistulotomy with marsupialisation, fistulotomy, and fistulectomy (Fig. 2d) [82, 92100]. LIFT resulted in significantly lower rates of bowel incontinence compared to fistulotomy with marsupialisation (log OR − 30.5, 95% CrI − 75.1 to − 0.8), fistulotomy (log OR − 32.1, 95% CrI − 76.4 to − 2.3), and fistulectomy (log OR − 34.0, 95% CrI − 77.9 to − 4.0) (Fig. 6a, b). Of these treatments, LIFT ranked best for minimising rates of bowel incontinence (in 99.1% of comparisons; n = 3 trials with 70 participants), while fistulectomy was the worst performing treatment and ranked best in only 6.8% of comparisons (n = 5 trials with 228 participants; Table 2, Fig. 6c, d).
Table 2
SUCRA ranking probabilities among treatment comparisons for short-term success rates and bowel incontinence in patients with simple anal fistula
Treatment
No. of trials
Total participants
SUCRA value (rank)
Short-term success (≤ 6 months after surgery)a
 Fistulectomy
2
75
82.5 (1)
 LIFT
2
75
17.5 (2)
Bowel incontinenceb
 LIFT
3
70
99.1 (1)
 Fistulotomy with marsupialisation
5
216
61.5 (2)
 Fistulotomy
7
258
32.6 (3)
 Fistulectomy
5
228
6.8 (4)
LIFT ligation of the inter-sphincteric fistula tract, SUCRA surface under the cumulative ranking
aComplete healing of the anal fistula without recurrence or persistence of symptoms on follow-up. Healing was defined on the basis of clinical examination, and/or endoanal ultrasound scan (USS) or pelvic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings, or was self-reported by patients on the basis of the resolution of symptoms at follow-up
bDefined as incontinence to either gas, liquid, and/or solid stool
In the setting of complex anal fistula, bowel incontinence was analysed in six trials, comparing four treatments (LIFT, fibrin glue, collagen plug, and advancement flap) among 340 participants (Fig. 2e) [83, 8688, 90, 91]. LIFT was associated with significantly lower rates of bowel incontinence compared with collagen plug (log OR − 21.9, 95% CrI − 70.3 to − 0.5) and advancement flap (log OR − 23.8, 95% CrI − 71.7 to − 2.6), but not relative to fibrin glue (log OR − 7.7, 95% CrI − 68.0 to 43.7) (Fig. 7a, b). Among the treatments assessed, LIFT ranked the best (in 86.2% of comparisons; n = 3 trials with 102 participants), while advancement flap was the worst performing treatment, ranking best in only 10.3% of comparisons (n = 5 trials with 150 participants) (Table 3, Fig. 7c, d).
Table 3
SUCRA ranking probabilities among treatment comparisons for short and long-term success rates and bowel incontinence in patients with complex anal fistula
Treatment
No. of trials
Total participants
SUCRA value (rank)
Short-term success (≤ 6 months after surgery)a
 Fibrin glue
4
74
62.7 (1)
 LIFT
2
67
51.3 (2)
 Advancement flap
5
148
50.8 (3)
 Collagen plug
3
91
46.2 (4)
 Adipose-derived stem cells with a collagen plug
2
44
39.0 (5)
Long-term success (> 6 months after surgery)a
 LIFT
2
77
92.3 (1)
 Advancement flap
4
126
47.9 (2)
 Collagen plug
2
48
9.8 (3)
Bowel incontinenceb
 LIFT
3
102
86.2 (1)
 Fibrin glue
2
30
66.1 (2)
 Collagen plug
2
58
37.4 (3)
 Advancement flap
5
150
10.3 (4)
LIFT ligation of the inter-sphincteric fistula tract, SUCRA surface under the cumulative ranking
aComplete healing of the anal fistula without recurrence or persistence of symptoms on follow-up. Healing was defined on the basis of clinical examination, and/or endoanal ultrasound scan (USS) or pelvic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings, or was self-reported by patients based on the resolution of symptoms at follow-up
bDefined as incontinence to either gas, liquid, and/or solid stool

Secondary outcomes

Hospital length of stay

Two studies assessed hospital length of stay, comparing two treatments (fistulotomy with marsupialisation and fistulotomy) among 263 participants with simple anal fistula (Supplementary Appendix S6) [94, 95]. The duration of hospitalisation did not differ between fistulotomy with marsupialisation versus fistulotomy (MD − 0.4, 95% CrI − 1.6 to 0.9) (Supplementary Appendix S6 and Table S7).
Hospital LOS could not be evaluated in participants with complex anal fistula as no single treatment was evaluated in more than one trial (Table S8).

Overall postoperative complications

Two studies evaluated overall postoperative complication rates, comparing two different treatments (fistulotomy with marsupialisation versus fistulotomy) in 163 participants with simple anal fistula (Supplementary Appendix S6) [93, 95]. Postoperative complications rates were similar between fistulotomy with marsupialisation and fistulotomy (log OR − 0.7, 95% CrI − 2.2 to 0.7) (Supplementary Appendix S6 and Table S9).
Overall postoperative complications were also assessed in two studies, comparing two treatments (LIFT versus advancement flap) in 108 participants with complex anal fistula (Supplementary Appendix S6) [88, 91]. Complication rates were not significantly different between LIFT versus advancement flap (log OR − 0.5, 95% CrI − 1.9 to 0.9) (Supplementary Appendix S6 and Table S10).

Sensitivity analysis

Results of the sensitivity analyses, when all treatments were assessed, are reported in Supplementary Appendix S6, with narrative summaries provided in Supplementary Appendix S7. Findings were concordant with the overall analysis. LIFT consistently ranked first in terms of minimising bowel incontinence for both simple and complex anal fistula. For patients with simple anal fistula, LIFT resulted in significantly lower rates of bowel incontinence compared with fistulotomy, fistulectomy, and seton. With respect to complex anal fistula, LIFT was associated with less bowel incontinence compared to fistulotomy with marsupialisation, fistulectomy, collagen plug, fistulotomy, advancement flap, fistulotomy with primary sphincter reconstruction, and suture dragging with pad compression. Success rates in the short and long term, hospital LOS, and overall postoperative complication rates were not significantly different between any of the treatments for both simple and complex anal fistula.

Inconsistency and heterogeneity analysis

On visual inspection of the consistency models, systematic inconsistencies between indirect and direct treatment effects within the network were observed for short-term success in patients with complex anal fistulae, and for overall complication rates in patients with both simple and complex anal fistulae (Supplementary Appendix S8). Results of the heterogeneity analysis are reported in Supplementary Appendix S9. Variability in effect sizes between trials was largely attributable to true heterogeneity rather than chance with respect to both short-term and long-term success. For short-term success, such variability was observed between studies comparing LIFT versus fistulectomy (I2 = 75%) [82, 83] in patients with simple anal fistula, and LIFT versus advancement flap (I2 = 82%) [87, 88] in patients with complex anal fistula. For long-term success in patients with complex anal fistulae, studies comparing advancement flap with collagen plug also demonstrated variability in their effect sizes that was mainly due to true heterogeneity rather than chance (I2 = 86%) [80, 89].

Discussion

This study compared the relative efficacy of various surgical treatments for optimising healing and minimising bowel incontinence among 52 RCTs including patients with simple or complex anal fistula. A large number of treatments were identified, although many of the novel treatments were excluded from the primary analyses as they were studied in only a single trial, including a small number of patients. Of the commonly studied treatments, LIFT was associated with the least impact on bowel continence, irrespective of anal fistula classification and despite the sensitivity analysis in which all treatments were included. There were no differences between treatments for short-term success rates (6 months or less from surgery), hospital LOS and overall postoperative complications in patients with simple and complex anal fistulae. Treatment efficacy for achieving long-term success (more than 6 months after surgery) were also similar for complex anal fistula, whilst long-term success could not be evaluated because of the lack of trials evaluating this outcome in patients with simple anal fistula.
Two previous NMAs have also assessed the optimum treatment for preserving anal sphincter function, specifically for patients with complex anal fistula [102, 103]. The more recent of these reviews concluded that the “TROPIS” procedure achieves the best rate of healing, whilst an improved LIFT (“imLIFT”) technique was associated with the lowest incidence of complications [102]. However, the reliability of these conclusions may be limited by the inclusion of evidence derived from non-randomised (cohort) studies, which introduces selection and confounding bias. Furthermore, novel treatments such as the imLIFT technique, which were studied in only a single RCT with a small number of patients, were also included in their NMA. Effect sizes for these treatments were obtained mostly from statistically derived indirect comparisons because of the scarcity of direct evidence from head-to-head trials, and were associated with high levels of imprecision resulting from underpowered analyses [25]. The latter study was conducted in 2017, and pooled evidence presented in 20 RCTs which included patients with only complex anal fistula [103]. However, 21 trials evaluating the efficacy of different treatments in patients with anal fistula have been published since then. The current NMA utilised these latest data presented in all 52 relevant RCTs, in addition to analysing the efficacy of different treatments among patients with both simple and complex anal fistula, highlighting its strength. Moreover, to minimise bias, the primary analyses included only treatments that were connected to at least two other treatments in the network (i.e. treatments that were evaluated in more than one trial), thus facilitating a more robust NMA.
LIFT is primarily indicated for trans-sphincteric fistulae, where the fistula tract passes through the inter-sphincteric space [19, 104106]. Horseshoe fistula and those secondary to Crohn’s disease have been identified as significant predictors for failure after LIFT [19]. The anatomical curvature of horseshoe fistula tracts mean it is more challenging to achieve complete eradication, as the curved extent of the track in the deep post-anal space may not be adequately drained, providing a nidus for cryptoglandular sepsis to recur [19]. Perianal fistulae secondary to Crohn’s disease are associated with an increased incidence of irregular fistula tracks, including those that are curved and/or contain multiple external openings [107, 108]. For this reason, studies which included patients with anal fistula deemed secondary to IBD were excluded from the present review. Appropriate patient selection for LIFT is therefore paramount, although current data lacks granularity to accurately differentiate outcomes based on fistula location. Nonetheless, the NMA has shown that LIFT appears to have the least impact on bowel continence amongst patients with all types of cryptoglandular anal fistula.
In this review, treatment efficacy was evaluated for simple and complex fistula separately. However, there was significant heterogeneity in terms of how anal fistulae were defined by individual authors across the included trials. Fistulae were commonly classified on the basis of clinical impression following a digital rectal examination, although proctoscopy, endoanal USS and pelvic MRI were also utilised in many cases. With respect to this observed variability, there remains a need to reach a consensus on an appropriate system for classifying anal fistula. This issue was not addressed in the most recent Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland (ACPGBI) position statement on anal fistula management [8], although the European Society of Coloproctology (ESCP) are currently working to develop a definition consensus [109]. This will facilitate greater comparability of treatment efficacy between studies, and aid surgeons in deciding on the most suitable treatment in view of the anatomical course and complexity of a patient’s anal fistula.
There are some limitations to this study. Our primary analysis included only treatments which were assessed in multiple (i.e. more than one) RCTs. However, this was determined a priori, to improve statistical rigor relative to previous NMA estimates in this field [102, 103]. The inherent consequence of this was the inability to compare more sparsely studied interventions for managing simple and complex anal fistula. However, the results of our sensitivity analyses, when all treatments were included, were concordant with our overall results. In the future, these novel procedures need further study in larger trials, to better elucidate their comparative efficacy in managing simple and complex anal fistula. While the focus of this review was primarily on ascertaining the anal fistula treatment which best balances success in achieving anal fistula healing with preservation of anal sphincter continence, this proved difficult owing to variability in how these outcomes were measured (Supplementary Appendix S10), and in the timing of follow-up (Supplementary Appendix S11). Healing was either subjectively recorded (in 63.5% of studies, 33/52), or was based on objective clinical criteria (i.e. physical examination or pelvic MRI findings) but were recorded by investigators who were not blinded to the treatment received. Distinguishing between the different severities of bowel incontinence (i.e. those who developed incontinence to gas versus liquid versus solid stool) was also not possible because of substantial ambiguity in how these data were reported. Future trials should therefore consider consistently reporting on a core set of outcomes using standardised definitions [110, 111], so that surgeons may accurately educate and counsel patients on the relative risks and efficacy of each treatment option for anal fistula. Additionally, in contrast to the two previous NMAs on this topic [102, 103], to attempt to mitigate the inconsistencies in follow-up duration between trials, the efficacy of each treatment for achieving healing was measured at two time points (6 months or less and more than 6 months after surgery). Despite this, the results for long-term efficacy of different treatments should be interpreted with caution given the limited long-term follow-up data that are available in existing RCTs, highlighting a need for future studies to collect higher quality data over a longer period of time following anal fistula surgery.

Conclusions

On the basis of existing RCT data, there is insufficient evidence to recommend one treatment over another regarding their short and long-term efficacy in successfully facilitating healing of both simple and complex anal fistula. However, LIFT appears to be associated with the least impairment of bowel continence irrespective of anal fistula classification. The generalisability of these findings may be limited by the lack of standardised preoperative investigations and classification systems for anal fistula, variability in the reporting of healing and incontinence outcomes and their definitions, together with the fact that some novel techniques were studied in only a small number of patients with short durations of follow-up, and in select geographical areas.

Declarations

Conflict of interest

Professor Greg O’Grady and Professor Ian P. Bissett have ownership interests with The Insides Company Ltd (Auckland, New Zealand). Professor O’Grady is an executive director, co-founder, and chief scientific officer. Professor Bissett is a co-founder and chief medical officer. Professor O’Grady is also a co-founder and chief executive officer of Alimetry Ltd (Auckland, New Zealand). The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Ethical approval

Not applicable.
Not applicable.
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​.

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Unsere Produktempfehlungen

Die Chirurgie

Print-Titel

Das Abo mit mehr Tiefe

Mit der Zeitschrift Die Chirurgie erhalten Sie zusätzlich Online-Zugriff auf weitere 43 chirurgische Fachzeitschriften, CME-Fortbildungen, Webinare, Vorbereitungskursen zur Facharztprüfung und die digitale Enzyklopädie e.Medpedia.

e.Med Interdisziplinär

Kombi-Abonnement

Jetzt e.Med zum Sonderpreis bestellen!

Für Ihren Erfolg in Klinik und Praxis - Die beste Hilfe in Ihrem Arbeitsalltag

Mit e.Med Interdisziplinär erhalten Sie Zugang zu allen CME-Fortbildungen und Fachzeitschriften auf SpringerMedizin.de.

Jetzt bestellen und 100 € sparen!

Anhänge

Supplementary Information

Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
Literatur
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Steele SR, Kumar R, Feingold DL, Rafferty JL, Buie WD (2011) Standards practice task force of the american society of colon and rectal surgeons. Practice parameters for the management of perianal abscess and fistula-in-ano. Dis Colon Rectum 54(12):1465–74PubMedCrossRef Steele SR, Kumar R, Feingold DL, Rafferty JL, Buie WD (2011) Standards practice task force of the american society of colon and rectal surgeons. Practice parameters for the management of perianal abscess and fistula-in-ano. Dis Colon Rectum 54(12):1465–74PubMedCrossRef
3.
Zurück zum Zitat Felt-Bersma RJF, Bartelsman JF (2009) Haemorrhoids, rectal prolapse, anal fissure, peri-anal fistulae and sexually transmitted diseases. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 23(4):575–592PubMedCrossRef Felt-Bersma RJF, Bartelsman JF (2009) Haemorrhoids, rectal prolapse, anal fissure, peri-anal fistulae and sexually transmitted diseases. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 23(4):575–592PubMedCrossRef
4.
Zurück zum Zitat Emile SH, Elfeki H, El-Said M, Khafagy W, Shalaby M (2021) Modification of parks classification of cryptoglandular anal fistula. Dis Colon Rectum 64(4):446–458PubMedCrossRef Emile SH, Elfeki H, El-Said M, Khafagy W, Shalaby M (2021) Modification of parks classification of cryptoglandular anal fistula. Dis Colon Rectum 64(4):446–458PubMedCrossRef
5.
Zurück zum Zitat Parks AG, Gordon PH, Hardcastle JD (1976) A classification of fistula-in-ano. Br J Surg 63(1):1–12PubMedCrossRef Parks AG, Gordon PH, Hardcastle JD (1976) A classification of fistula-in-ano. Br J Surg 63(1):1–12PubMedCrossRef
6.
Zurück zum Zitat Vogel JD, Johnson EK, Morris AM et al (2016) Clinical practice guideline for the management of anorectal abscess, fistula-in-ano, and rectovaginal fistula. Dis Colon Rectum 59(12):1117–1133PubMedCrossRef Vogel JD, Johnson EK, Morris AM et al (2016) Clinical practice guideline for the management of anorectal abscess, fistula-in-ano, and rectovaginal fistula. Dis Colon Rectum 59(12):1117–1133PubMedCrossRef
8.
Zurück zum Zitat Williams G, Williams A, Tozer P et al (2018) The treatment of anal fistula: second ACPGBI position statement-2018. Colorectal Dis 20(Suppl 3):5–31PubMedCrossRef Williams G, Williams A, Tozer P et al (2018) The treatment of anal fistula: second ACPGBI position statement-2018. Colorectal Dis 20(Suppl 3):5–31PubMedCrossRef
9.
Zurück zum Zitat Cavanaugh M, Hyman N, Osler T (2002) Fecal incontinence severity index after fistulotomy: a predictor of quality of life. Dis Colon Rectum 45(3):349–353PubMedCrossRef Cavanaugh M, Hyman N, Osler T (2002) Fecal incontinence severity index after fistulotomy: a predictor of quality of life. Dis Colon Rectum 45(3):349–353PubMedCrossRef
10.
Zurück zum Zitat Göttgens KWA, Janssen PTJ et al (2015) Long-term outcome of low perianal fistulas treated by fistulotomy: a multicenter study. Int J Colorectal Dis 30(2):213–219PubMedCrossRef Göttgens KWA, Janssen PTJ et al (2015) Long-term outcome of low perianal fistulas treated by fistulotomy: a multicenter study. Int J Colorectal Dis 30(2):213–219PubMedCrossRef
11.
Zurück zum Zitat Williams JG, MacLeod CA, Rothenberger DA, Goldberg SM (1991) Seton treatment of high anal fistulae. Br J Surg 78(10):1159–1161PubMedCrossRef Williams JG, MacLeod CA, Rothenberger DA, Goldberg SM (1991) Seton treatment of high anal fistulae. Br J Surg 78(10):1159–1161PubMedCrossRef
12.
13.
Zurück zum Zitat Garg P, Song J, Bhatia A, Kalia H, Menon GR (2010) The efficacy of anal fistula plug in fistula-in-ano: a systematic review. Colorectal Dis 12(10):965–970PubMedCrossRef Garg P, Song J, Bhatia A, Kalia H, Menon GR (2010) The efficacy of anal fistula plug in fistula-in-ano: a systematic review. Colorectal Dis 12(10):965–970PubMedCrossRef
14.
Zurück zum Zitat Johnson EK, Gaw JU, Armstrong DN (2006) Efficacy of anal fistula plug vs. fibrin glue in closure of anorectal fistulas. Dis Colon Rectum 49(3):371–6PubMedCrossRef Johnson EK, Gaw JU, Armstrong DN (2006) Efficacy of anal fistula plug vs. fibrin glue in closure of anorectal fistulas. Dis Colon Rectum 49(3):371–6PubMedCrossRef
15.
Zurück zum Zitat Ortíz H, Marzo J (2000) Endorectal flap advancement repair and fistulectomy for high trans-sphincteric and suprasphincteric fistulas. Br J Surg 87(12):1680–1683PubMedCrossRef Ortíz H, Marzo J (2000) Endorectal flap advancement repair and fistulectomy for high trans-sphincteric and suprasphincteric fistulas. Br J Surg 87(12):1680–1683PubMedCrossRef
16.
Zurück zum Zitat Kodner IJ, Mazor A, Shemesh EI, Fry RD, Fleshman JW, Birnbaum EH (1993) Endorectal advancement flap repair of rectovaginal and other complicated anorectal fistulas. Surgery 114(4):682–9 (discussion 689–90)PubMed Kodner IJ, Mazor A, Shemesh EI, Fry RD, Fleshman JW, Birnbaum EH (1993) Endorectal advancement flap repair of rectovaginal and other complicated anorectal fistulas. Surgery 114(4):682–9 (discussion 689–90)PubMed
17.
Zurück zum Zitat Mizrahi N, Wexner SD, Zmora O et al (2002) Endorectal advancement flap. Dis Colon Rectum 45(12):1616–1621PubMedCrossRef Mizrahi N, Wexner SD, Zmora O et al (2002) Endorectal advancement flap. Dis Colon Rectum 45(12):1616–1621PubMedCrossRef
18.
Zurück zum Zitat Bleier JIS, Moloo H, Goldberg SM (2010) Ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract: an effective new technique for complex fistulas. Dis Colon Rectum 53(1):43–46PubMedCrossRef Bleier JIS, Moloo H, Goldberg SM (2010) Ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract: an effective new technique for complex fistulas. Dis Colon Rectum 53(1):43–46PubMedCrossRef
19.
Zurück zum Zitat Emile SH, Khan SM, Adejumo A, Koroye O (2020) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) in treatment of anal fistula: an updated systematic review, meta-analysis, and meta-regression of the predictors of failure. Surgery 167(2):484–492PubMedCrossRef Emile SH, Khan SM, Adejumo A, Koroye O (2020) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) in treatment of anal fistula: an updated systematic review, meta-analysis, and meta-regression of the predictors of failure. Surgery 167(2):484–492PubMedCrossRef
20.
Zurück zum Zitat Hong KD, Kang S, Kalaskar S, Wexner SD (2014) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) to treat anal fistula: systematic review and meta-analysis. Tech Coloproctol 18(8):685–691PubMedCrossRef Hong KD, Kang S, Kalaskar S, Wexner SD (2014) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) to treat anal fistula: systematic review and meta-analysis. Tech Coloproctol 18(8):685–691PubMedCrossRef
21.
Zurück zum Zitat Elfeki H, Shalaby M, Emile SH, Sakr A, Mikael M, Lundby L (2020) A systematic review and meta-analysis of the safety and efficacy of fistula laser closure. Tech Coloproctol 24(4):265–274PubMedCrossRef Elfeki H, Shalaby M, Emile SH, Sakr A, Mikael M, Lundby L (2020) A systematic review and meta-analysis of the safety and efficacy of fistula laser closure. Tech Coloproctol 24(4):265–274PubMedCrossRef
22.
Zurück zum Zitat Cheng F, Huang Z, Li Z (2020) Efficacy and safety of mesenchymal stem cells in treatment of complex perianal fistulas: a meta-analysis. Stem Cells Int 21(2020):8816737 Cheng F, Huang Z, Li Z (2020) Efficacy and safety of mesenchymal stem cells in treatment of complex perianal fistulas: a meta-analysis. Stem Cells Int 21(2020):8816737
23.
Zurück zum Zitat Lightner AL, Wang Z, Zubair AC, Dozois EJ (2018) A systematic review and meta-analysis of mesenchymal stem cell injections for the treatment of perianal Crohn’s disease: progress made and future directions. Dis Colon Rectum 61(5):629–640PubMedCrossRef Lightner AL, Wang Z, Zubair AC, Dozois EJ (2018) A systematic review and meta-analysis of mesenchymal stem cell injections for the treatment of perianal Crohn’s disease: progress made and future directions. Dis Colon Rectum 61(5):629–640PubMedCrossRef
24.
Zurück zum Zitat Gutiérrez VM, Guillen SG, Flores MW et al (2021) Safety of allogeneic adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells for the treatment of complex perianal fistulas not associated with Crohn’s disease: a phase clinical trial. Dis Colon Rectum 64(3):328–334 Gutiérrez VM, Guillen SG, Flores MW et al (2021) Safety of allogeneic adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells for the treatment of complex perianal fistulas not associated with Crohn’s disease: a phase clinical trial. Dis Colon Rectum 64(3):328–334
25.
Zurück zum Zitat Jansen JP, Fleurence R, Devine B et al (2011) Interpreting indirect treatment comparisons and network meta-analysis for health-care decision making: report of the ISPOR task force on indirect treatment comparisons good research practices: part 1. Value Health 14(4):417–428PubMedCrossRef Jansen JP, Fleurence R, Devine B et al (2011) Interpreting indirect treatment comparisons and network meta-analysis for health-care decision making: report of the ISPOR task force on indirect treatment comparisons good research practices: part 1. Value Health 14(4):417–428PubMedCrossRef
26.
Zurück zum Zitat Dias S, Caldwell DM (2019) Network meta-analysis explained. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed 104(1):F8-12PubMedCrossRef Dias S, Caldwell DM (2019) Network meta-analysis explained. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed 104(1):F8-12PubMedCrossRef
27.
Zurück zum Zitat Booth A, Clarke M, Dooley G et al (2012) The nuts and bolts of PROSPERO: an international prospective register of systematic reviews. Syst Rev 9(1):2CrossRef Booth A, Clarke M, Dooley G et al (2012) The nuts and bolts of PROSPERO: an international prospective register of systematic reviews. Syst Rev 9(1):2CrossRef
28.
Zurück zum Zitat Hutton B, Salanti G, Caldwell DM et al (2015) The PRISMA extension statement for reporting of systematic reviews incorporating network meta-analyses of health care interventions: checklist and explanations. Ann Intern Med 162(11):777–784PubMedCrossRef Hutton B, Salanti G, Caldwell DM et al (2015) The PRISMA extension statement for reporting of systematic reviews incorporating network meta-analyses of health care interventions: checklist and explanations. Ann Intern Med 162(11):777–784PubMedCrossRef
29.
Zurück zum Zitat Chen XL, Huang ZH, Zhan YQ et al (2005) A minimally invasive approach in the treatment of complicated anal fistula through spatium intermuscular of anal sphincter. Zhonghua Wei Chang Wai Ke Za Zhi 8(4):322–324PubMed Chen XL, Huang ZH, Zhan YQ et al (2005) A minimally invasive approach in the treatment of complicated anal fistula through spatium intermuscular of anal sphincter. Zhonghua Wei Chang Wai Ke Za Zhi 8(4):322–324PubMed
30.
Zurück zum Zitat Wang C, Lu JG, Cao YQ, Yao YB, Guo XT, Yin HQ (2012) Traditional Chinese surgical treatment for anal fistulae with secondary tracks and abscess. World J Gastroenterol 18(40):5702–5708PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef Wang C, Lu JG, Cao YQ, Yao YB, Guo XT, Yin HQ (2012) Traditional Chinese surgical treatment for anal fistulae with secondary tracks and abscess. World J Gastroenterol 18(40):5702–5708PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
31.
Zurück zum Zitat Bramer WM, Giustini D, de Jonge GB, Holland L, Bekhuis T (2016) De-duplication of database search results for systematic reviews in EndNote. J Med Libr Assoc 104(3):240–243PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef Bramer WM, Giustini D, de Jonge GB, Holland L, Bekhuis T (2016) De-duplication of database search results for systematic reviews in EndNote. J Med Libr Assoc 104(3):240–243PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
33.
Zurück zum Zitat Wu YF, Zheng BC, Chen Q et al (2021) Video-assisted modified ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract, an integration of 2 minimally invasive techniques for the treatment of parks type II anal fistulas. Surg Innov 28(4):419–426PubMedCrossRef Wu YF, Zheng BC, Chen Q et al (2021) Video-assisted modified ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract, an integration of 2 minimally invasive techniques for the treatment of parks type II anal fistulas. Surg Innov 28(4):419–426PubMedCrossRef
35.
Zurück zum Zitat Wan X, Wang W, Liu J, Tong T (2014) Estimating the sample mean and standard deviation from the sample size, median, range and/or interquartile range. BMC Med Res Methodol 14:135PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef Wan X, Wang W, Liu J, Tong T (2014) Estimating the sample mean and standard deviation from the sample size, median, range and/or interquartile range. BMC Med Res Methodol 14:135PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
36.
Zurück zum Zitat Higgins JPT, Li T, Deeks JJ (2019) Choosing effect measures and computing estimates of effect. Cochrane handbook for systematic reviews of interventions. Wiley, Hoboken, pp 143–76CrossRef Higgins JPT, Li T, Deeks JJ (2019) Choosing effect measures and computing estimates of effect. Cochrane handbook for systematic reviews of interventions. Wiley, Hoboken, pp 143–76CrossRef
37.
Zurück zum Zitat Drevon D, Fursa SR, Malcolm AL (2017) Intercoder reliability and validity of WebPlotDigitizer in extracting graphed data. Behav Modif 41(2):323–339PubMedCrossRef Drevon D, Fursa SR, Malcolm AL (2017) Intercoder reliability and validity of WebPlotDigitizer in extracting graphed data. Behav Modif 41(2):323–339PubMedCrossRef
39.
Zurück zum Zitat Sweeting MJ, Sutton AJ, Lambert PC (2004) What to add to nothing? Use and avoidance of continuity corrections in meta-analysis of sparse data. Stat Med 23:1351–1375PubMedCrossRef Sweeting MJ, Sutton AJ, Lambert PC (2004) What to add to nothing? Use and avoidance of continuity corrections in meta-analysis of sparse data. Stat Med 23:1351–1375PubMedCrossRef
41.
Zurück zum Zitat Dias S, Sutton AJ, Ades AE, Welton NJ (2013) Evidence synthesis for decision making 2: a generalized linear modeling framework for pairwise and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Med Decis Making 33(5):607–617PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef Dias S, Sutton AJ, Ades AE, Welton NJ (2013) Evidence synthesis for decision making 2: a generalized linear modeling framework for pairwise and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Med Decis Making 33(5):607–617PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
42.
45.
Zurück zum Zitat Salanti G (2012) Indirect and mixed-treatment comparison, network, or multiple-treatments meta-analysis: many names, many benefits, many concerns for the next generation evidence synthesis tool. Res Syn Meth 3:80–97CrossRef Salanti G (2012) Indirect and mixed-treatment comparison, network, or multiple-treatments meta-analysis: many names, many benefits, many concerns for the next generation evidence synthesis tool. Res Syn Meth 3:80–97CrossRef
46.
Zurück zum Zitat Dias S (2014) Inconsistency in networks of evidence based on randomised controlled trials. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Dias S (2014) Inconsistency in networks of evidence based on randomised controlled trials. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)
47.
Zurück zum Zitat Grimaud JC, Munoz-Bongrand N, Siproudhis L et al (2010) Fibrin glue is effective healing perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 138(7):2275–81, 2281.e1PubMedCrossRef Grimaud JC, Munoz-Bongrand N, Siproudhis L et al (2010) Fibrin glue is effective healing perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 138(7):2275–81, 2281.e1PubMedCrossRef
48.
Zurück zum Zitat Molendijk I, Bonsing BA, Roelofs H et al (2015) Allogeneic bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells promote healing of refractory perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 149(4):918–27.e6PubMedCrossRef Molendijk I, Bonsing BA, Roelofs H et al (2015) Allogeneic bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells promote healing of refractory perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 149(4):918–27.e6PubMedCrossRef
49.
Zurück zum Zitat Panés J, García-Olmo D, Van Assche G et al (2018) Long-term efficacy and safety of stem cell therapy (Cx601) for complex perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 154(5):1334–42.e4PubMedCrossRef Panés J, García-Olmo D, Van Assche G et al (2018) Long-term efficacy and safety of stem cell therapy (Cx601) for complex perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 154(5):1334–42.e4PubMedCrossRef
51.
Zurück zum Zitat Zhou C, Li M, Zhang Y et al (2020) Autologous adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of Crohn’s fistula-in-ano: an open-label, controlled trial. Stem Cell Res Ther 11(1):124PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef Zhou C, Li M, Zhang Y et al (2020) Autologous adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of Crohn’s fistula-in-ano: an open-label, controlled trial. Stem Cell Res Ther 11(1):124PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
52.
Zurück zum Zitat Ho KS, Ho YH (2005) Controlled, randomized trial of island flap anoplasty for treatment of trans-sphincteric fistula-in-ano: early results. Tech Coloproctol 9(2):166–168PubMedCrossRef Ho KS, Ho YH (2005) Controlled, randomized trial of island flap anoplasty for treatment of trans-sphincteric fistula-in-ano: early results. Tech Coloproctol 9(2):166–168PubMedCrossRef
57.
62.
Zurück zum Zitat Han JG, Wang ZJ, Zheng Y, Chen CW, Wang XQ, Che XM et al (2016) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract vs ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract plus a bioprosthetic anal fistula plug procedure in patients with transsphincteric anal fistula: early results of a multicenter prospective randomized trial. Ann Surg 264(6):917–922. https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000001562CrossRefPubMed Han JG, Wang ZJ, Zheng Y, Chen CW, Wang XQ, Che XM et al (2016) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract vs ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract plus a bioprosthetic anal fistula plug procedure in patients with transsphincteric anal fistula: early results of a multicenter prospective randomized trial. Ann Surg 264(6):917–922. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1097/​SLA.​0000000000001562​CrossRefPubMed
63.
64.
Zurück zum Zitat Herreros MD, Garcia-Arranz M, Guadalajara H, De-La-Quintana P, Garcia-Olmo D, FATT Collaborative Group (2012) Autologous expanded adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of complex cryptoglandular perianal fistulas: a phase III randomized clinical trial (FATT 1: fistula Advanced Therapy Trial 1) and long-term evaluation. Dis Colon Rectum 55(7):762–772. https://doi.org/10.1097/DCR.0b013e318255364aCrossRefPubMed Herreros MD, Garcia-Arranz M, Guadalajara H, De-La-Quintana P, Garcia-Olmo D, FATT Collaborative Group (2012) Autologous expanded adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of complex cryptoglandular perianal fistulas: a phase III randomized clinical trial (FATT 1: fistula Advanced Therapy Trial 1) and long-term evaluation. Dis Colon Rectum 55(7):762–772. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1097/​DCR.​0b013e318255364a​CrossRefPubMed
66.
Zurück zum Zitat Kalim M, Umerzai FK (2017) Comparison of mean healing time and mean scores between fistulectomy and fistulotomy for the treatment of low fistula in ano. J Postgrad Med Inst 31(2):118–121 Kalim M, Umerzai FK (2017) Comparison of mean healing time and mean scores between fistulectomy and fistulotomy for the treatment of low fistula in ano. J Postgrad Med Inst 31(2):118–121
74.
75.
Zurück zum Zitat van Koperen PJ, Bemelman WA, Gerhards MF, Janssen LWM, van Tets WF, van Dalsen AD et al (2011) The anal fistula plug treatment compared with the mucosal advancement flap for cryptoglandular high transsphincteric perianal fistula: a double-blinded multicenter randomized trial. Dis Colon Rectum 54(4):387–393. https://doi.org/10.1007/DCR.0b013e318206043eCrossRefPubMed van Koperen PJ, Bemelman WA, Gerhards MF, Janssen LWM, van Tets WF, van Dalsen AD et al (2011) The anal fistula plug treatment compared with the mucosal advancement flap for cryptoglandular high transsphincteric perianal fistula: a double-blinded multicenter randomized trial. Dis Colon Rectum 54(4):387–393. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​DCR.​0b013e318206043e​CrossRefPubMed
79.
Zurück zum Zitat Khoshnevis J, Cuomo R, Karami F et al (2022) Jump technique versus seton method for anal fistula repair: a randomized controlled trial. J Invest Surg 35(6):1217–1223PubMedCrossRef Khoshnevis J, Cuomo R, Karami F et al (2022) Jump technique versus seton method for anal fistula repair: a randomized controlled trial. J Invest Surg 35(6):1217–1223PubMedCrossRef
80.
Zurück zum Zitat Ortiz H, Marzo J, Ciga MA, Oteiza F, Armendáriz P, de Miguel M (2009) Randomized clinical trial of anal fistula plug versus endorectal advancement flap for the treatment of high cryptoglandular fistula in ano. Br J Surg 96(6):608–612PubMedCrossRef Ortiz H, Marzo J, Ciga MA, Oteiza F, Armendáriz P, de Miguel M (2009) Randomized clinical trial of anal fistula plug versus endorectal advancement flap for the treatment of high cryptoglandular fistula in ano. Br J Surg 96(6):608–612PubMedCrossRef
81.
Zurück zum Zitat Dong X, Jia Z, Yu B, Zhang X, Xu F, Tan L (2020) Effect of intersphincteric fistula tract ligation versus anal fistulectomy on pain scores and serum levels of vascular endothelial growth factor and interleukin-2 in patients with simple anal fistulas. J Int Med Res 48(9):300060520949072PubMedCrossRef Dong X, Jia Z, Yu B, Zhang X, Xu F, Tan L (2020) Effect of intersphincteric fistula tract ligation versus anal fistulectomy on pain scores and serum levels of vascular endothelial growth factor and interleukin-2 in patients with simple anal fistulas. J Int Med Res 48(9):300060520949072PubMedCrossRef
82.
Zurück zum Zitat Goudar BV, Dakhani NM (2021) A comparative study of ligation of intesphincteric fistula tract versus conventional fistulectomy in management of low fistula in ano: a randomized control trial. Int Surg J 8(1):261–266CrossRef Goudar BV, Dakhani NM (2021) A comparative study of ligation of intesphincteric fistula tract versus conventional fistulectomy in management of low fistula in ano: a randomized control trial. Int Surg J 8(1):261–266CrossRef
83.
Zurück zum Zitat A ba-bai-ke-re MMTJ, Wen H, Huang HG et al (2010) Randomized controlled trial of minimally invasive surgery using acellular dermal matrix for complex anorectal fistula. World J Gastroenterol 16(26):3279–86PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef A ba-bai-ke-re MMTJ, Wen H, Huang HG et al (2010) Randomized controlled trial of minimally invasive surgery using acellular dermal matrix for complex anorectal fistula. World J Gastroenterol 16(26):3279–86PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
84.
Zurück zum Zitat Garcia-Arranz M, Garcia-Olmo D, Herreros MD et al (2020) Autologous adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of complex cryptoglandular perianal fistula: a randomized clinical trial with long-term follow-up. Stem Cells Transl Med 9(3):295–301PubMedCrossRef Garcia-Arranz M, Garcia-Olmo D, Herreros MD et al (2020) Autologous adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of complex cryptoglandular perianal fistula: a randomized clinical trial with long-term follow-up. Stem Cells Transl Med 9(3):295–301PubMedCrossRef
85.
Zurück zum Zitat Garcia-Olmo D, Herreros D, Pascual I et al (2009) Expanded adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of complex perianal fistula: a phase II clinical trial. Dis Colon Rectum 52(1):79–86PubMedCrossRef Garcia-Olmo D, Herreros D, Pascual I et al (2009) Expanded adipose-derived stem cells for the treatment of complex perianal fistula: a phase II clinical trial. Dis Colon Rectum 52(1):79–86PubMedCrossRef
87.
Zurück zum Zitat Kumar P, Sarthak S, Kumar Singh P, Mishra TS, Kumar SP (2022) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract vs endorectal advancement flap for high type fistula in ano: a randomized controlled trial (Frail Trial). J Am Coll Surg 235(5):S15CrossRef Kumar P, Sarthak S, Kumar Singh P, Mishra TS, Kumar SP (2022) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract vs endorectal advancement flap for high type fistula in ano: a randomized controlled trial (Frail Trial). J Am Coll Surg 235(5):S15CrossRef
88.
Zurück zum Zitat Mushaya C, Bartlett L, Schulze B, Ho YH (2012) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract compared with advancement flap for complex anorectal fistulas requiring initial seton drainage. Am J Surg 204(3):283–289PubMedCrossRef Mushaya C, Bartlett L, Schulze B, Ho YH (2012) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract compared with advancement flap for complex anorectal fistulas requiring initial seton drainage. Am J Surg 204(3):283–289PubMedCrossRef
89.
Zurück zum Zitat Schwandner T, Thieme A, Scherer R et al (2018) Randomized clinical trial comparing a small intestinal submucosa anal fistula plug to advancement flap for the repair of complex anal fistulas. Int J Surg Open 1(15):25–31 Schwandner T, Thieme A, Scherer R et al (2018) Randomized clinical trial comparing a small intestinal submucosa anal fistula plug to advancement flap for the repair of complex anal fistulas. Int J Surg Open 1(15):25–31
90.
Zurück zum Zitat van der Hagen SJ, Baeten CG, Soeters PB, van Gemert WG (2011) Staged mucosal advancement flap versus staged fibrin sealant in the treatment of complex perianal fistulas. Gastroenterol Res Pract 26(2011):186350 van der Hagen SJ, Baeten CG, Soeters PB, van Gemert WG (2011) Staged mucosal advancement flap versus staged fibrin sealant in the treatment of complex perianal fistulas. Gastroenterol Res Pract 26(2011):186350
91.
Zurück zum Zitat Madbouly KM, El Shazly W, Abbas KS, Hussein AM (2014) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract versus mucosal advancement flap in patients with high transsphincteric fistula-in-ano: a prospective randomized trial. Dis Colon Rectum 57(10):1202–1208PubMedCrossRef Madbouly KM, El Shazly W, Abbas KS, Hussein AM (2014) Ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract versus mucosal advancement flap in patients with high transsphincteric fistula-in-ano: a prospective randomized trial. Dis Colon Rectum 57(10):1202–1208PubMedCrossRef
92.
Zurück zum Zitat Al Sebai OI, Ammar MS, Mohamed SH, El Balshy MA (2021) Comparative study between intersphinecteric ligation of perianal fistula versus conventional fistulotomy with or without seton in the treatment of perianal fistula: a prospective randomized controlled trial. Ann Med Surg (Lond) 61:180–184PubMedCrossRef Al Sebai OI, Ammar MS, Mohamed SH, El Balshy MA (2021) Comparative study between intersphinecteric ligation of perianal fistula versus conventional fistulotomy with or without seton in the treatment of perianal fistula: a prospective randomized controlled trial. Ann Med Surg (Lond) 61:180–184PubMedCrossRef
93.
Zurück zum Zitat Anan M, Emile SH, Elgendy H et al (2019) Fistulotomy with or without marsupialisation of wound edges in treatment of simple anal fistula: a randomised controlled trial. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 101(7):472–478PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef Anan M, Emile SH, Elgendy H et al (2019) Fistulotomy with or without marsupialisation of wound edges in treatment of simple anal fistula: a randomised controlled trial. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 101(7):472–478PubMedPubMedCentralCrossRef
94.
Zurück zum Zitat Chalya PL, Mabula JB (2013) Fistulectomy versus fistulotomy with marsupialisation in the treatment of low fistula-in- ano: a prospective randomized controlled trial. Tanzan J Health Res 15(3):193–198PubMedCrossRef Chalya PL, Mabula JB (2013) Fistulectomy versus fistulotomy with marsupialisation in the treatment of low fistula-in- ano: a prospective randomized controlled trial. Tanzan J Health Res 15(3):193–198PubMedCrossRef
95.
Zurück zum Zitat Ho YH, Tan M, Leong AF, Seow-Choen F (1998) Marsupialization of fistulotomy wounds improves healing: a randomized controlled trial. Br J Surg 85(1):105–107PubMedCrossRef Ho YH, Tan M, Leong AF, Seow-Choen F (1998) Marsupialization of fistulotomy wounds improves healing: a randomized controlled trial. Br J Surg 85(1):105–107PubMedCrossRef
97.
Zurück zum Zitat Kronborg O (1985) To lay open or excise a fistula-in-ano: a randomized trial. Br J Surg 72(12):970PubMedCrossRef Kronborg O (1985) To lay open or excise a fistula-in-ano: a randomized trial. Br J Surg 72(12):970PubMedCrossRef
99.
Zurück zum Zitat Vinay G, Balasubrahmanya KS (2017) Comparative study on efficacy of fistulotomy and ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) procedure in management of fistula-in-ano. Int Surg J 4(10):3406–3408CrossRef Vinay G, Balasubrahmanya KS (2017) Comparative study on efficacy of fistulotomy and ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) procedure in management of fistula-in-ano. Int Surg J 4(10):3406–3408CrossRef
100.
Zurück zum Zitat Nour H, Abdelhamid MI, Abdel BA (2020) Fistulotomy wound edges; to marsupialize or not? In simple perianal fistula, a comparative clinical trial. Surg Chron 25(2):126–129 Nour H, Abdelhamid MI, Abdel BA (2020) Fistulotomy wound edges; to marsupialize or not? In simple perianal fistula, a comparative clinical trial. Surg Chron 25(2):126–129
101.
Zurück zum Zitat Elshamy MT, Emile SH, Abdelnaby M, Khafagy W, Elbaz SA (2022) A pilot randomized controlled trial on ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) versus modified parks technique and two-stage seton in treatment of complex anal fistula. Updates Surg 74(2):657–666PubMedCrossRef Elshamy MT, Emile SH, Abdelnaby M, Khafagy W, Elbaz SA (2022) A pilot randomized controlled trial on ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT) versus modified parks technique and two-stage seton in treatment of complex anal fistula. Updates Surg 74(2):657–666PubMedCrossRef
102.
Zurück zum Zitat Huang H, Ji L, Gu Y, Li Y, Xu S (2022) Efficacy and safety of sphincter-preserving surgery in the treatment of complex anal fistula: a network meta-analysis. Front Surg 8(9):825166CrossRef Huang H, Ji L, Gu Y, Li Y, Xu S (2022) Efficacy and safety of sphincter-preserving surgery in the treatment of complex anal fistula: a network meta-analysis. Front Surg 8(9):825166CrossRef
103.
104.
Zurück zum Zitat Rojanasakul A, Pattanaarun J, Sahakitrungruang C, Tantiphlachiva K (2007) Total anal sphincter saving technique for fistula-in-ano; the ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract. J Med Assoc Thai 90(3):581–586PubMed Rojanasakul A, Pattanaarun J, Sahakitrungruang C, Tantiphlachiva K (2007) Total anal sphincter saving technique for fistula-in-ano; the ligation of intersphincteric fistula tract. J Med Assoc Thai 90(3):581–586PubMed
105.
Zurück zum Zitat Ji L, Zhang Y, Xu L, Wei J, Weng L, Jiang J (2020) Advances in the treatment of anal fistula: a mini-review of recent five-year clinical studies. Front Surg 7:586891PubMedCrossRef Ji L, Zhang Y, Xu L, Wei J, Weng L, Jiang J (2020) Advances in the treatment of anal fistula: a mini-review of recent five-year clinical studies. Front Surg 7:586891PubMedCrossRef
106.
Zurück zum Zitat Alasari S, Kim NK (2014) Overview of anal fistula and systematic review of ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT). Tech Coloproctol 18(1):13–22PubMedCrossRef Alasari S, Kim NK (2014) Overview of anal fistula and systematic review of ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract (LIFT). Tech Coloproctol 18(1):13–22PubMedCrossRef
107.
Zurück zum Zitat Coremans G, Dockx S, Wyndaele J, Hendrickx A (2003) Do anal fistulas in Crohn’s disease behave differently and defy Goodsall’s rule more frequently than fistulas that are cryptoglandular in origin? Am J Gastroenterol 98(12):2732–2735PubMedCrossRef Coremans G, Dockx S, Wyndaele J, Hendrickx A (2003) Do anal fistulas in Crohn’s disease behave differently and defy Goodsall’s rule more frequently than fistulas that are cryptoglandular in origin? Am J Gastroenterol 98(12):2732–2735PubMedCrossRef
108.
Zurück zum Zitat Halme L, Sainio AP (1995) Factors related to frequency, type, and outcome of anal fistulas in Crohn’s disease. Dis Colon Rectum 38(1):55–59PubMedCrossRef Halme L, Sainio AP (1995) Factors related to frequency, type, and outcome of anal fistulas in Crohn’s disease. Dis Colon Rectum 38(1):55–59PubMedCrossRef
109.
Zurück zum Zitat de Groof EJ, Cabral VN, Buskens CJ et al (2016) Systematic review of evidence and consensus on perianal fistula: an analysis of national and international guidelines. Colorectal Dis 18(4):O119–O134PubMedCrossRef de Groof EJ, Cabral VN, Buskens CJ et al (2016) Systematic review of evidence and consensus on perianal fistula: an analysis of national and international guidelines. Colorectal Dis 18(4):O119–O134PubMedCrossRef
111.
Zurück zum Zitat Machielsen AJHM, Iqbal N, Kimman ML, Sahnan K, Adegbola SO, Kleijnen J et al (2020) The development of a cryptoglandular anal fistula core outcome set (AFCOS): an international Delphi study protocol. United Eur Gastroenterol J 8(2):220–226CrossRef Machielsen AJHM, Iqbal N, Kimman ML, Sahnan K, Adegbola SO, Kleijnen J et al (2020) The development of a cryptoglandular anal fistula core outcome set (AFCOS): an international Delphi study protocol. United Eur Gastroenterol J 8(2):220–226CrossRef
Metadaten
Titel
Efficacy of different surgical treatments for management of anal fistula: a network meta-analysis
verfasst von
S. Bhat
W. Xu
C. Varghese
N. Dubey
C. I. Wells
C. Harmston
G. O’Grady
I. P. Bissett
A. Y. Lin
Publikationsdatum
17.07.2023
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Techniques in Coloproctology / Ausgabe 10/2023
Print ISSN: 1123-6337
Elektronische ISSN: 1128-045X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10151-023-02845-8

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 10/2023

Techniques in Coloproctology 10/2023 Zur Ausgabe

Häusliche Gewalt in der orthopädischen Notaufnahme oft nicht erkannt

28.05.2024 Häusliche Gewalt Nachrichten

In der Notaufnahme wird die Chance, Opfer von häuslicher Gewalt zu identifizieren, von Orthopäden und Orthopädinnen offenbar zu wenig genutzt. Darauf deuten die Ergebnisse einer Fragebogenstudie an der Sahlgrenska-Universität in Schweden hin.

Fehlerkultur in der Medizin – Offenheit zählt!

28.05.2024 Fehlerkultur Podcast

Darüber reden und aus Fehlern lernen, sollte das Motto in der Medizin lauten. Und zwar nicht nur im Sinne der Patientensicherheit. Eine negative Fehlerkultur kann auch die Behandelnden ernsthaft krank machen, warnt Prof. Dr. Reinhard Strametz. Ein Plädoyer und ein Leitfaden für den offenen Umgang mit kritischen Ereignissen in Medizin und Pflege.

Mehr Frauen im OP – weniger postoperative Komplikationen

21.05.2024 Allgemeine Chirurgie Nachrichten

Ein Frauenanteil von mindestens einem Drittel im ärztlichen Op.-Team war in einer großen retrospektiven Studie aus Kanada mit einer signifikanten Reduktion der postoperativen Morbidität assoziiert.

TAVI versus Klappenchirurgie: Neue Vergleichsstudie sorgt für Erstaunen

21.05.2024 TAVI Nachrichten

Bei schwerer Aortenstenose und obstruktiver KHK empfehlen die Leitlinien derzeit eine chirurgische Kombi-Behandlung aus Klappenersatz plus Bypass-OP. Diese Empfehlung wird allerdings jetzt durch eine aktuelle Studie infrage gestellt – mit überraschender Deutlichkeit.

Update Chirurgie

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.

S3-Leitlinie „Diagnostik und Therapie des Karpaltunnelsyndroms“

Karpaltunnelsyndrom BDC Leitlinien Webinare
CME: 2 Punkte

Das Karpaltunnelsyndrom ist die häufigste Kompressionsneuropathie peripherer Nerven. Obwohl die Anamnese mit dem nächtlichen Einschlafen der Hand (Brachialgia parästhetica nocturna) sehr typisch ist, ist eine klinisch-neurologische Untersuchung und Elektroneurografie in manchen Fällen auch eine Neurosonografie erforderlich. Im Anfangsstadium sind konservative Maßnahmen (Handgelenksschiene, Ergotherapie) empfehlenswert. Bei nicht Ansprechen der konservativen Therapie oder Auftreten von neurologischen Ausfällen ist eine Dekompression des N. medianus am Karpaltunnel indiziert.

Prof. Dr. med. Gregor Antoniadis
Berufsverband der Deutschen Chirurgie e.V.

S2e-Leitlinie „Distale Radiusfraktur“

Radiusfraktur BDC Leitlinien Webinare
CME: 2 Punkte

Das Webinar beschäftigt sich mit Fragen und Antworten zu Diagnostik und Klassifikation sowie Möglichkeiten des Ausschlusses von Zusatzverletzungen. Die Referenten erläutern, welche Frakturen konservativ behandelt werden können und wie. Das Webinar beantwortet die Frage nach aktuellen operativen Therapiekonzepten: Welcher Zugang, welches Osteosynthesematerial? Auf was muss bei der Nachbehandlung der distalen Radiusfraktur geachtet werden?

PD Dr. med. Oliver Pieske
Dr. med. Benjamin Meyknecht
Berufsverband der Deutschen Chirurgie e.V.

S1-Leitlinie „Empfehlungen zur Therapie der akuten Appendizitis bei Erwachsenen“

Appendizitis BDC Leitlinien Webinare
CME: 2 Punkte

Inhalte des Webinars zur S1-Leitlinie „Empfehlungen zur Therapie der akuten Appendizitis bei Erwachsenen“ sind die Darstellung des Projektes und des Erstellungswegs zur S1-Leitlinie, die Erläuterung der klinischen Relevanz der Klassifikation EAES 2015, die wissenschaftliche Begründung der wichtigsten Empfehlungen und die Darstellung stadiengerechter Therapieoptionen.

Dr. med. Mihailo Andric
Berufsverband der Deutschen Chirurgie e.V.