Hernia, Ventral Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cost- Effectiveness and Cost-utility of Laparoscopic Versus Open Repair of Ventral Hernia: Randomized Clinical Trial
The purpose of this prospective paper is to make a comparison between laparoscopic and opening approaches in ventral hernia repair, taking into account absence of recurrence in long - time (5 years), results centered at patient, especially satisfaction with expectations and improvement of normal physical activity, morbidity that particular form must include chronic pain, adjusted mortality through co-morbidities and, finally, prospective expenses, related to both effectiveness and utility
Population: 130 patients, diagnosed with clinic and radiologic (abdominal wall CT scan)
ventral hernia, were recruited, after expressing their willingness, for either laparoscopic
or laparotomy repair to be conducted at Infanta Elena Hospital, Huelva (Spain), between
January 2005 and October 2008. Recruitment criteria were: patients above 18 years old,
diagnosed with primary or incisional ventral hernia, including recurrent ones, featuring a
prior-to-operation estimated size from 20 to 225 cm2. Exclusion criteria included type 4 or
5 of ASA (American Society of Anesthesiologist), to suffer from a disease limiting lifespan
to less than 2 years, cirrhotic ascites, emergency surgery or any complication as intestinal
obstruction, strangulated hernia, peritonitis, local or systemic infection, failure of
patient to ensure an at least 2 years follow-up or abandonment protocol. Every patient was
fully informed and signed his willingness. Defect sizes were estimated and classified
following Chevrel Classification. Patients were assigned a randomly generated number (see
validated and published tables), meaning both laparoscopic or open repair, and informed same
morning of operation. All operations were conducted by experienced surgeons. Protocol was
approved by Local Ethics Committee.
General techniques
All patients were given an heparin prophylactic dose to prevent thromboembolic events
evening prior to operation-day, as well as 1500 mg cefuroxime intravenous (IV) during
anesthetic induction (in case of allergy, 600 mg of clindamycin IV + 80 mg of gentamicin
IV). Also, evening before intervention-day all patients filled in survey (SF-36
questionnaire). Skin was prepared with an alcoholic solution of clorhexidine. Surgical pain
was treated with magnesium metamizole (2gr IV each 6 hours). Upon patient request, 100 mg of
tramadol IV was added (a maximum amount of 400 mg). Every patient was encouraged to hang
around as soon as possible and be on a diet 8 hours after surgery, supplying oral treatment
from then onwards. On discharge, patients were recommended wearing an abdominal binder for a
month.
Laparoscopic repair: Pneumoperitoneum was performed to 12 mmHg after placement first 12 mm
trocar at level of umbilicus in anterior axillary line. Subsequently are placed two 5 mm
auxiliary trocars. In all cases we explore entire abdominal wall for other defects not
detected preoperatively. Herniary contents and sac are reduced releasing adhesions with
diathermy or harmonic scalpel. Defects are repaired with a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)
patch (Dual Mesh; W.L Gore and Associates, FlagstaV, AZ USA) with double crown fixation as
technique of Carbajo et al, ensuring exceed 3 cm edge of defect, using 5mm tackers (Protack,
Autosuture; Tyco Healthcare, USA), reducing intrabdominal pressure to 8 mmHg. Not abdominal
drainage was used. Skin was closed with metal staples. All operations were performed by
experienced surgeons, over than 40 laparoscopic ventral hernia repairs.
Open repair: Incision was made over hernia defect, reducing herniary contents by opening sac
if it is necessary. We made 4 cm soft tissue flaps around edge of defect depending on
available healthy fascial tissue. In all cases we use Chevrel technique with fascial closure
using anterior rectus sheath with continuous and absorbable suture and placement of
polypropylene mesh (Parietene, standart polypropylene mesh, Covidien, Norwalk, CT) in an
onlay position fixed with polypropylene suture. We used one or two suction drains below
subcutaneous flap which was sutured with absorbable suture, and metallic skin staples.
Follow-up
A given follow-up was always conducted by same researcher before hospital discharge, after
30 days, 60 days, a year and once a year thereafter. All postoperative reports were analyzed
with aim of finding protocol deviations or intraoperative complications. At hospital
follow-up, before discharge, complications were actively looked (seroma, hematoma, wound
infection, prolonged ileus, urinary retention and medical complications such as stroke,
respiratory failure, arrhythmia, deep vein thrombosis, adverse drug reaction or pneumonia),
hospital stay was achieved and onset of walking. Patient-centered outcomes analyzed were
pain measured by visual analogue scale (VAS), addition to daily physical activity, analysis
of quality of life related to health by surveys after 2 and 5 days (CVP-CG questionnaire)
and difference between preoperative values, at 3 months and 12 months of physical and mental
construct by survey (SF-36 questionnaire). At follow-up after discharge several facts were
taken as exhibiting a satisfactory evolution, among them absence of hernia recurrence
(defined as clinic examination and radiologic non-defect abdominal wall), absence of
symptoms related to disability (chronic pain, intermittent ileus, trocar site hernia,
fistula, abscess or prosthesis extrusion) and also absence of readmission or reoperation due
to hernia repair.
Cost analysis
Expenses spent in ventral hernia repair were calculated from viewpoint of funder (health
costs), taking into account only direct expenses and discarding indirect and intangible
ones, as nearly all patients were economically assisted during convalescence period. Euro
currency was used and a prospective approach to costs analysis was employed, following
cost-opportunity method. As in-hospital expenses following variables were used materials,
such as prosthesis, sutures, trocars, drainages and other surgical instruments;
preoperative, anesthetics and postoperative medication (included recommended at discharge);
operation room personnel cost and hospital wards; cost of diagnostic tests performed and
consumption of hospitality. Installation costs, equipment inventoried and cost of
warehousing and inventory management of consumables were neglected. As extra-hospital costs
following items were included: personnel and materials used in medical visits and cures,
drugs not prescribed, travel costs in medical transports, totality of which generated as a
consequence of convalescence period (up to 60 days). Finally, expenses produced by a new
hospital stay or reoperation because of complicated issues within two years after hernia
repair were estimated, according to direct hospital costs at the beginning of study and
further added to hospital expenses. As expenditure variable we use average patient cost.
Statistical analysis
A sample size of 130 patients was considered in order to detect differences in morbidity or
an increase in hospital stays of 20%, assuming a type I error of 5%, powder of 80%, with
losses of 10% and 2% crosslinking. To confirm normality Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was
employed. Discrete variables are presented as percentage and confidence intervals of 95% and
were compared through either Pearson test or Fisher exact test. Quantitative variables are
depicted as mean values and standard deviations confidence intervals 95% using Student's t
test. In all cases analysis was by intention of treat including in laparoscopic group those
patients that required conversion to laparotomy. Also, an incremental cost-effectiveness
analysis with confidence intervals of 95% was conducted, following Fieller theorem, and for
sensibility analysis inversion cross-point was taken (threshold analysis). As efficiency
measure a clinic profit analysis was carried out by means of a composite analysis that
integrates absence of recurrence, readmission, reoperation or disability. As an indirect
measure of utility is used values obtained from questionnaires (HRQOL -Health Related
Quality Of Life), assuming standard mean response in case of SF-36 and mean response
standardized by standard deviation of difference in case of CVP-CG instruments between two
types of repairs as well as effect size between preoperative value and postoperative one in
case of SF-36. choice of measurement of HRQOL as a measure of utility was made under
requirement that in absence of clinically relevant differences in mortality, recurrence or
morbidity, a clinically relevant difference in HRQOL is a preference by patient and thus a
choice between treatment alternatives. A minimum significance level of 0.05 was assumed.
Every analysis was conducted by blinded statistician through statistical package (SPSS
statistical program, version 11.5, SPSS Inc, Chicago).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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