Inguinal Hernia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Paediatric Surgery Across Sub-Saharan Africa: A Multi-Centre Prospective Cohort Study
Background: Five billion people worldwide do not have access to safe, affordable surgical
care. A significant proportion live in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where up to 50% of the
population are children. There is limited literature on neonatal and paediatric surgery in
SSA and children's surgery does not appear on any of the National Health Strategic Plans for
the 47 independent countries across SSA.
Objectives: To form a collaboration of surgeons and allied health professionals involved in
children's surgery across SSA and collectively undertake the largest prospective cohort study
of paediatric surgery in this region.
Materials and Methods: Data will be collected via REDCap website on all patients with
gastroschisis, anorectal malformation, appendicitis, inguinal hernia and intussusception,
during a 1-month period of collaborators choice between October 2016 to April 2017, with a
30-day follow up until the end of May 2017. Estimated study population: 1450 patients from 50
institutions. Full ethical approval has been granted by the host centre; local ethical
approval will be required at collaborating centres for participation. All collaborators will
be co-authors.
Primary outcome will be in-hospital all-cause mortality. Secondary outcomes will include
post-intervention complications. Data will be collected on institutional facilities, patient
demographics, duration from condition onset to presentation, peri-operative resuscitation,
intervention and outcome.
Differences in outcomes between SSA and benchmark data from high-income countries will be
calculated using chi-squared analysis. Multi-level multivariate logistic regression analysis
will be used to identify interventions and peri-operative factors associated with improved
outcomes; p<0.05 will be deemed significant.
Outcome: Results will be used to advocate for enhanced children's surgical services in SSA.
We shall identify context-appropriate interventions associated with improved outcome. The
collaboration will help to enhance research capacity in the region.
Introduction
Research Collaboratives
PaedSurg Africa aims to recruit surgeons and allied health professionals undertaking neonatal
and paediatric surgery (PS) across sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) - an area heavily neglected in
global health prioritisation. Such research collaboratives are being increasingly utilised as
a highly effective and efficient method of collecting large volume prospective data in a
short period of time. A great recruitment incentive will be ethical group co-authorship of
published results for all research collaborators.
Global Paediatric Surgery
In 2015, the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery (LCoGS) highlighted that 5 billion people
worldwide do not have access to safe, affordable surgical care. The same year, the World
Health Assembly (Resolution 68.15) incorporated emergency and essential surgery and
anaesthesic care within 'Universal Health Coverage'. In concordance with this, plans have
arisen to exponentially scale up access to surgical care in low- and middle-income countries
(LMICs). Children's surgery has yet to be formally recognised within these plans despite
children forming up to 50% of the population in LMICs.
SSA has the highest unmet need for surgical care in the world at 41 million cases per year
(29% of the worlds unmet need). 9% of the global surgical burden of disease is attributable
to congenital anomalies. It is estimated that 2.6 million children are born with a congenital
anomaly in SSA each year.
Hence, in order for the world to achieve the LCoGS goal of 80% coverage of surgical care by
2030, there must be a focus on scaling up neonatal and PS care in SSA where a significant
proportion of the burden of surgical disease lies.
To date there has been limited data published on neonatal and PS in SSA. Nwomeh et al
undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis of neonatal surgery in SSA and identified
just 13 prospective studies and 38 retrospective studies between 1995 - 2014. The majority of
these were single institutional studies, many with limited numbers. The results highlight
poor outcomes with mortality rates of over 50-100% for conditions such as gastroschisis,
which has mortality rates consistently under 4% in high-income countries. Similarly, the
limited literature on PS in SSA highlights significantly poorer outcomes for common
conditions such as appendicitis, intussusception and inguinal hernia.
Surgery has largely been overlooked in global health prioritisation and funding, likely
because of the perception of prohibitive cost and complexity of care. Conversely, recent
health economic studies have amply demonstrated the overall cost-effectiveness of PS
procedures; for instance investing in a paediatric inguinal hernia repair is similar to
administering a tetanus vaccine or treating a patient with malaria in terms of
disability-adjusted life years (DALYS)/ US$.
This study aims to collect prospective data on five common neonatal and PS conditions across
SSA, all of which have low morbidity and mortality (M&M) in high income countries (HICs), but
reported poorer outcomes in SSA. It will be the first neonatal and PS cohort study across SSA
and will undoubtedly form one of the largest prospective data sets in this region of the
world.
The five conditions to be studied are gastroschisis, anorectal malformation, appendicitis,
inguinal hernia and intussusception.
Gastroschisis
The incidence of gastroschisis is increasing worldwide, as are the number of these patients
presenting to hospital in SSA. In Pretoria, South Africa, there was a 35-fold increase in
patients presenting with gastroschisis from the early 1980's to late 1990s. Centres such as
Harare, Zimbabwe, report receiving up to 3-4 cases per week. The true incidence of
gastroschisis is unknown in SSA, however studies suggest the incidence, at least in some
regions, appears to be similar to HICs. With a prevalence of 5.4/10,000 births, we can
estimate that 1440 cases will be born each month in SSA.
Mortality rates for gastroschisis have fallen dramatically in HICs from 60% in the 1960's to
less than 4% today. This has resulted from improvements in neonatal resuscitation and
peri-operative management, awareness of complications such as abdominal compartment syndrome,
and the provision of parenteral nutrition (PN). Gastroschisis has been suggested as a
bellwether procedure for neonatal surgery capacity in low resource settings because there are
usually no co-morbidities, yet the condition tests all the key elements that go into the
successful management of a newborn with a surgical condition.
The data available regarding gastroschisis in SSA suggests significantly poorer outcomes than
in HIC. Mortality rates have been reported as: 60% Malawi, 57-75% Nigeria, 84-100% Zimbabwe,
100% Uganda, 100% Cote'd'Ivoire. Mortality in South Africa is lower at 12-43%. In an
international survey of gastroschisis, two thirds of the 25 institutions in SSA stated their
mortality rate was >75% and the remaining third stated it was between 50-75%.
There is great variation in the management of gastroschisis across the globe and even between
surgeons within the same institution. Primary closure rates vary from 16%, particularly in
centres where routine use of preformed silos (PFS) have been adopted, to 92%. The majority of
staged closure in SSA is undertaken using a surgical silo; PFS are utilised less due to lack
of availability and training. Some surgeons recommend primary palliative care in SSA. A
randomised control trial of primary closure versus PFS has reported they have similar
outcomes, however there is a trend towards fewer ventilator days with the latter. A
meta-analysis highlighted that the studies with least selection bias show that PFS is
associated with fewer ventilator days (P<0.0001), reduced time to first feed (p=0.04) and
lower infection rates (p=0.03).
There are many challenges faced by a surgeon in SSA. Patients are often outborn with no
antenatal diagnosis, and hence presentation is delayed resulting in hypothermia, sepsis,
hypovolaemia and bowel compromise. There is a natural tendency for babies with gastroschisis
to be born early; in Harare 43% were preterm and 72% were <2.5kg. Similarly in Durban 64%
were preterm and 72% <2.5kg. Many centres lack a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and have
limited anaesthetic resources. Exposure of the bowel to amniotic fluid results in dysmotility
and problems with absorption of nutrients; in the UK the average duration of parenteral (PN)
requirement in simple gastroschisis is 23 days and 51 days in complex gastroschisis
(gastroschisis associated with bowel perforation, necrosis or atresia). PN was only available
in 36% of SSA centres when surveyed. However, in Harare the median hospital stay was 4.5days
for the 85% who died, suggesting death was related to inadequate resuscitation and support
rather than lack of PN. A multi-centre Gastroschisis International (GiT) study showed
septicaemia to be the leading cause of death.
Some centres such as the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital have introduced a protocol
to ensure efficient pre- and post-operative resuscitation and care, preservation of body
heat, decompression of the stomach with a nasogastric tube, evacuation of meconium,
respiratory support and parental nutrition. As a result their mortality rate has fallen from
65% to 35%. However, Hadley notes that in Durban, despite access to NICU and PN, the overall
mortality is still 43%, with sepsis being the leading cause of death. They stress the
importance of meticulous central line care and a need for improved antenatal care and
delivery within a tertiary paediatric surgery centre. A protocol focussed on early and
aggressive resuscitation, avoidance of compartment syndrome, appropriate IV access and
proactive nutritional interventions may help SSA start to realise the improvements in outcome
as seen in HIC over the last 55-years. Implementing such interventions should have a knock on
effect to strengthen the neonatal healthcare system in SSA and hence help to improve outcomes
for all newborns with surgical conditions.
Anorectal Malformation
The birth prevalence of anorectal malformations (ARMs) has been reported as 1:1,500 - 1:5,000
in South Africa. In institutional publications from around SSA, caseload varies from 1-3
cases/ month. ARMs are one of the most common neonatal emergencies presenting to hospitals in
SSA: 9.5% surgical neonates in Tanzania, 13.4% congenital malformations in Nigeria.
Mortality in HIC has fallen from 23% in the 1940's to less than 3% today. Mortality has been
documented at 18.5 - 20% in Nigeria, with most deaths related to overwhelming sepsis,
respiratory insufficiency and cyanotic heart disease. Unlike gastroschisis, 50% cases are
associated with other anomalies: VACTERL (vertebral, anorectal, cardiac, tracheoesophageal,
renal and limb). Other challenges include late presentation (2-5 days), low birth weight (38%
< 2.5kg) and lack of adequate NICU facilities.
Management is dependent on the type of anomaly with low ARM typically being managed with a
primary anoplasty and higher anomalies requiring a primary colostomy followed by a posterior
sagittal anorectoplasty (PSARP) within the first year of life, and subsequent colostomy
closure. Divided sigmoid colostomy is preferred to avoid overspill of stool from the proximal
limb into the distal pouch, however some centres in SSA undertake loop colostomies. Lukong et
al highlighted their improvement in outcome following a change in practice from a transverse
loop colostomy to divided sigmoid colostomy with delayed PSARP. In some centres local
anaesthesia is utilised to undertake the colostomy, reducing the risks associated with
general anaesthesia where resources are limited.
Udefiagbon et al, highlight the problems with a colostomy, particularly in a low income
setting: skin excoriation, wound infection, sepsis, prolapse, fluid and electrolyte losses
and poor acceptance by care givers. They present impressive outcomes for primary PSARP
undertaken during the first week of life. Authors advocate the benefits of reduced infection
rate due to the sterile nature of the meconium and avoidance of a prolonged 3-stage
procedure, which is more expensive and often unfeasible for African families. However, this
practice requires safe neonatal anaesthesia, skilled surgeons and good standards of
peri-operative care. Olivieri et al have described a modified PSARP technique utilised in
Eritrea to reduce the risk of perianal wound infection where they leave a 3cm rectal stump,
which is trimmed after 2 weeks. Poenaru et al advocate performing a wider anoplasty, which is
less prone to stenosis, as regular dilatation and following-up can be challenging in this
context.
This study will capture the primary peri-operative management and outcomes for patients
presenting with ARM. Longer-term morbidity including faecal incontinence, anal stenosis,
constipation, urinary and ejaculatory problems and outcomes of subsequent surgery are beyond
the remit of this study.
Appendicitis
Acute appendicitis is one of the commonest causes for acute abdomen in children worldwide. In
Ethiopia appendicitis accounts for 12% of emergency paediatric surgery and in the Congo it
constitutes 30% of paediatric visceral surgery. Mortality from appendicitis is up to 4% in
some SSA settings and morbidity high with wound infection rates up to 60% and wound
dehiscence in up to 25%. Conversely, mortality from appendicitis in HICs is 0.04% and only
0.006% in children aged 9-19years. The LCoGS has listed laparotomy as one of three bellwether
procedures that must be safe and available at all institutions providing first level care.
There are a number of challenges for managing children with acute appendicitis in the SSA
setting. Children present late with 25-67% perforation rates; re-operation for
intra-abdominal sepsis is as high as 40%. Differential diagnoses in SSA are more varied. In
America, 82% of peritonitis in children is secondary to appendicitis whereas in SSA children
present with peritonitis secondary to typhoid perforation, tuberculosis and ascariasis. There
is often a lack of appropriate antibiotics, paediatric intensive care, blood products and
parental nutrition. HIV may impact on the spectrum and severity of surgical infection in
African children.
Inguinal Hernia
Paediatric inguinal hernia repair (PIHR) is the most commonly performed operation worldwide.
The incidence is up to 5% of term infants and 30% of preterm. It is widely considered a basic
and essential procedure that should be available to all and yet is largely unavailable in
SSA. Complicated inguinal hernias pose a threat to the life of the child and considerable
morbidity, which could be avoided by timely management of what is otherwise a straightforward
procedure. Infants are at greatest risk of delay; Zamakhshary found that waiting over 2 weeks
for a PIHR doubled the risk of incarceration in this age group.
In Ein's study of 6361 paediatric inguinal hernia repairs in Canada there were no deaths,
recurrence rate of 1.2%, wound infection rate of 1.2% and testicular atrophy rate of 0.3%. In
this study, 12% presented as incarcerated, but only 1% required emergency surgery for an
irreducible hernia and 2/6361 required a bowel resection. Ergogan reported similar outcomes
in Turkey.
In SSA, delays in presentation and lack of surgical capacity often result in a higher
proportion of complicated paediatric hernias. In Nigeria, outcomes have been reported as:
mortality 2.4%, intestinal resection 7%, testicular gangrene 15% and wound infection 15%.
Another centre reported that in their cohort of infants presenting <42days of age, 52% were
incarcerated, 36% required a bowel resection and 18% underwent an orchidectomy for testicular
infarction. Strangulated hernias constitute 22% of the emergency visceral surgery in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. A randomised controlled trial in Nigeria reported a
reduction in infection rate following PIHR from 4.8% to 0% with the use of prophylactic IV
gentamycin at induction.
Intussusception
Intussusception is a leading cause of intestinal obstruction (IO) in children. A study from
Nigeria reported 29% of IO from intussusception, 22% from ARM and 17% from obstructed PIH.
The incidence is South Africa is comparable to HICs at 56/100,000 < 1-year compared to
33-49/100,000 < 1-year in the US. Published studies suggest institutions in SSA see at least
one case/ month.
In HIC mortality is low at 0.1% in Europe and 0.4% in the US. Mortality rates in SSA vary
widely and have been reported at 0 - 55%. The average mortality rate across SSA is 9.4%.
There are a number of challenges to managing a child with intussusception in SSA. They often
present late; 92% patients in Ile-Ife, Nigeria, present >24 hours. In Kenya the main duration
of symptoms at presentation was 5 days (1-14). It was noted that the median delay for those
who died (6.4%) was 5-days versus 3-days in those who survived. Surgical site infections
following laparotomy for intussusception have been reported as high as 37.5%.
Management varies widely in SSA. In HICs most centres undertake air enema reduction (AER) as
primary management in cases without peritonitis, perforation or non-responsive shock. This
has been shown to be 1.48 times more effective than hydrostatic reduction (61% and 44%
respectively). Centres in SSA with access to AER report good success rates; in a study in
Ghana AER was successful in 59-67% cases and their mortality rate was 2%. They note that AER
costs 20% of the fee for surgical management. A study from Nigeria reports offering
hydrostatic reduction to 40% of cases, where it is successful in 64%. They also highlight the
significant cost savings.
Ahmed et al in Egypt describe their simple AER equipment with a pressure release value at
120mmHg. They report an 88.2% success rate with no complications. Wiersma and Hadley advocate
the use of AER in the operating theatre, which has improved their reduction rate to 53% from
22%.
Aim:
To compare outcomes of five common neonatal and paediatric surgical conditions between SSA
and HICs.
Objectives:
1. To undertake the first multi-centre prospective cohort study across SSA to compare
outcomes of common paediatric surgical conditions with benchmark data from HICs.
2. To identify context appropriate interventions and peri-operative factors associated with
an improved outcome.
3. To form a research collaboration of paediatric surgeons and allied health professionals
across SSA and help to enhance research capacity.
4. To raise awareness and provide advocacy for neonatal and paediatric surgical care within
global health prioritisation, planning and funding.
Methodology
Authorship:
PaedSurg Africa constitutes a network of surgeons and allied health professionals who work
with children requiring surgery across sub-Saharan Africa. This methodology is based on an
equal partnership model previously described in the Lancet and utilised by a number of
national and international collaboratives.
Publishing journals will be asked to make all co-authors PubMed citable. Articles will be
published under 'PaedSurg Africa Research Collaboration'. At the end of the article
co-authors will be listed under the following headings:
- Lead investigators: collaborators who have contributed to the study protocol, data
analysis and write-up of the manuscript.
- Country leads: collaborators who have recruited several sites in their country to
contribute to the study.
- Local investigators: collaborators who have gained ethical approval for the protocol in
their centre and collected data at their site including patient identification and data
completion with follow-up of mortality and complications.
The study invites up to three local investigators per institution per month of data
collection.
Collaborator Recruitment:
Primary recruitment will be through the lead investigators' personal contacts, which span
many centres and countries across SSA, and the Pan-African Paediatric Surgical Association
(PAPSA) mailing list. Research collaborators were recruited at the Global Initiative for
Children's Surgery (GICS) Conference hosted by the Royal College of Surgeons of England, May
2016. A further recruitment drive will be undertaken at the PAPSA Conference in Nigeria
(September 2016) where the research proposal will be presented, investigators actively
sought, and REDCap sign-up, app download and project set-up achieved.
Data Collection Tool:
Prospective data will be collected over a 1-month period utilising the free, user-friendly,
secure database, REDCap. The tool includes a Smartphone app that allows offline data
collection. Data collection sheets that can be printed for written data collection and later
uploaded will also be provided. Data collection will be open for any continuous 1-month
period between October 2016 to April 2017, to optimise uptake. A pilot study will be run in
August/ September 2016 at five institutions in SSA.
Conditions Studied:
The five conditions selected are common congenital or acquired neonatal and paediatric
surgical conditions with low morbidity and mortality in HICs. Consequently surgical
interventions for these conditions carry high avertable DALYs and cost-effectiveness ratios,
as saving the life of a neonate or child with minimal long-term disability can permit a
lifetime of labour and income for their family and their country's economy. Limited, mostly
retrospective, individual institutional studies suggest significantly poorer outcomes of
these conditions in SSA.
Validation:
At 5% of collaborating centres, one additional research collaborator will be asked to
identify patients and upload the study data independent to the other research collaborator(s)
at their centre. This data will be collected on a separate REDCap validation database and the
inputted data will be cross-checked with that entered into the main database. Only patients
with over 90% of data inputted will be included in the study. Data can be initially uploaded
and completed at a later date prior to submission if any data is missing.
Questionnaire Data:
A short questionnaire will be undertaken by all research collaborators at the time of project
sign up regarding the facilities and resources available at their institution.
Estimated Population:
Estimated patient numbers per centre during a 1-month study period are: 1-2 gastroschisis,
1-2 anorectal malformations, 11 appendicitis, 14 inguinal hernias, 1 intussusception (29
patients per centre). We aim to include a minimum of 50 centres, which would generate 1450
patients. Estimates were calculated using the mean number of patients presenting per month to
all institutions from SSA who have published data on these conditions.
Data Analysis:
Power calculations were undertaken to determine the minimum detectable differences in
mortality between SSA and benchmark data from HICs. These confirm that the study is
adequately powered to detect a difference in mortality of each of the five conditions between
SSA and HICs at a 5% significance level and 80% power. Outcomes in SSA compared to HICs will
be presented as relative risks and significant differences determined using Chi-Squared
analysis.
Multi-level, multivariate logistic regression analysis will be utilised to identify context
appropriate interventions and peri-operative factors associated with improved outcomes. For
example: does availability of air enema reduction significantly reduce mortality from
intussusception in the SSA context and if so, by how much? Results will be presented as odds
ratios. Data will be adjusted for confounding factors such as delay in presentation. P<0.05
will be deemed significant.
Ethics:
Full ethical approval for the project has been granted by the host centre, Kings College
London Research Ethics Committee. Research collaborators in SSA will be required to receive
approval for the project at their own centres according to local ethical regulations and
provide evidence of this in order to submit data.
If no formal ethics or audit committee exists, collaborators must provide written consent
from the Director of the Hospital or Head of Surgical Department. All data will be anonymous.
Data will not be identifiable at individual surgeon, institution or country level.
Outcome:
The results from this study can be used to advocate for enhanced neonatal and paediatric
surgical care in SSA, at an institutional level, country level via 'National Health Strategic
Plans' and at an international level. This is vital to ensure neonatal and paediatric surgery
are appropriately prioritised over the coming 15-years as access to surgical care in low- and
middle-income countries is scaled up following publication of the LCoGS and the WHA
resolution 68:15. Participation in this international project will help to enhance research
capacity amongst surgeons, anaesthetists and allied healthcare professionals across SSA.
Formation of the PaedSurg Africa Research Collaboration will provide the infrastructure for
future research projects and interventional studies to help improve outcome.
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