Outcomes among trauma patients with duodenal leak following primary versus complex repair of duodenal injuries: An Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma multicenter trial.

Journal: The Journal Of Trauma And Acute Care Surgery
Published:
Abstract

Background: Duodenal leak is a feared complication of repair, and innovative complex repairs with adjunctive measures (CRAM) were developed to decrease both leak occurrence and severity when leaks occur. Data on the association of CRAM and duodenal leak are sparse, and its impact on duodenal leak outcomes is nonexistent. We hypothesized that primary repair alone (PRA) would be associated with decreased duodenal leak rates; however, CRAM would be associated with improved recovery and outcomes when leaks do occur.

Methods: A retrospective, multicenter analysis from 35 Level 1 trauma centers included patients older than 14 years with operative, traumatic duodenal injuries (January 2010 to December 2020). The study sample compared duodenal operative repair strategy: PRA versus CRAM (any repair plus pyloric exclusion, gastrojejunostomy, triple tube drainage, duodenectomy).

Results: The sample (N = 861) was primarily young (33 years) men (84%) with penetrating injuries (77%); 523 underwent PRA and 338 underwent CRAM. Complex repairs with adjunctive measures were more critically injured than PRA and had higher leak rates (CRAM 21% vs. PRA 8%, p < 0.001). Adverse outcomes were more common after CRAM with more interventional radiology drains, prolonged nothing by mouth and length of stay, greater mortality, and more readmissions than PRA (all p < 0.05). Importantly, CRAM had no positive impact on leak recovery; there was no difference in number of operations, drain duration, nothing by mouth duration, need for interventional radiology drainage, hospital length of stay, or mortality between PRA leak versus CRAM leak patients (all p > 0.05). Furthermore, CRAM leaks had longer antibiotic duration, more gastrointestinal complications, and longer duration until leak resolution (all p < 0.05). Primary repair alone was associated with 60% lower odds of leak, whereas injury grades II to IV, damage control, and body mass index had higher odds of leak (all p < 0.05). There were no leaks among patients with grades IV and V injuries repaired by PRA.

Conclusion: Complex repairs with adjunctive measures did not prevent duodenal leaks and, moreover, did not reduce adverse sequelae when leaks did occur. Our results suggest that CRAM is not a protective operative duodenal repair strategy, and PRA should be pursued for all injury grades when feasible. Level of evidence: Therapeutic/Care Management; Level IV.

Authors
Rachel Choron, Amanda Teichman, Christopher Bargoud, Jason Sciarretta, Randi Smith, Dustin Hanos, Iman Afif, Jessica Beard, Navpreet Dhillon, Ashling Zhang, Mira Ghneim, Rebekah Devasahayam, Oliver Gunter, Alison Smith, Brandi Sun, Chloe Cao, Jessica Reynolds, Lauren Hilt, Daniel Holena, Grace Chang, Meghan Jonikas, Karla Echeverria, Nathaniel Fung, Aaron Anderson, Caitlin Fitzgerald, Ryan Dumas, Jeremy Levin, Christine Trankiem, Jaehee Yoon, Jacqueline Blank, Joshua Hazelton, Christopher Mclaughlin, Rami Al Aref, Jordan Kirsch, Daniel Howard, Dane Scantling, Kate Dellonte, Michael Vella, Brent Hopkins, Chloe Shell, Pascal Udekwu, Evan Wong, Bellal Joseph, Howard Lieberman, Walter Ramsey, Collin Stewart, Claudia Alvarez, John Berne, Jeffry Nahmias, Ivan Puente, Joe Patton, Ilya Rakitin, Lindsey Perea, Odessa Pulido, Hashim Ahmed, Jane Keating, Lisa Kodadek, Jason Wade, Reynold Henry, Martin Schreiber, Andrew Benjamin, Abid Khan, Laura Mann, Caleb Mentzer, Vasileios Mousafeiris, Francesk Mulita, Shari Reid Gruner, Erica Sais, Joshua Marks, Christopher Foote, Carlos Palacio, Dias Argandykov, Haytham Kaafarani, Susette Coyle, Marie Macor, Michelle T Manderski, Mayur Narayan, Mark Seamon