Abdominal wall reconstruction in ventral hernia repair: do current models predict surgical site risk?

IF 2.4 2区 医学 Q1 SURGERY
Hernia Pub Date : 2025-06-18 DOI:10.1007/s10029-025-03350-7
Zachary Gala, Mehdi S Lemdani, Dustin Crystal, Jane N Ewing, Robyn B Broach, John P Fischer, Stephen J Kovach
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Complications from ventral hernia repair (VHR) pose a significant healthcare burden. Risk assessment and stratification models are thus incentivized to improve cost-effectiveness and patient outcomes. The Ventral Hernia Risk Score (VHRS) and Ventral Hernia Work Group Classification (VHWG) are metrics that attempt to stratify and predict surgical site infection (SSI) and surgical site occurrence (SSO) risk based on patient characteristics. Our study aims to evaluate these models and assess external validity.

Methods: A retrospective review of all VHR procedures between October 2013 - August 2022 performed by the senior authors was conducted. Demographic, comorbidity, perioperative and outcome-related information was collected. Non-SSI and non-SSO cohorts were compared to SSI and SSO cohorts respectively to assess possible significant differences in patient demographics and operative characteristics. The VHRS and VHWG models were applied to each patient to predict risk. The Youden index of the respective Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves defined optimal score cutoffs for both models. Area under curve (AUC) was reported to assess model prediction quality.

Results: A total of 1,414 patients who underwent VHR was identified, of which 175 (12.4%) experienced SSI and 367 (26.0%) SSO. Mean follow-up was 1.72 years [30 days, 13.65 years]. Patient demographics were similar between both non-SSI and SSI as well as non-SSO and SSO cohorts. However, comorbidities including prior non-VHR abdominal surgery (SSI: p < 0.001; SSO: p < 0.001), prior-VHR (SSI: p = 0.001; SSO: p-0.012), and prior mesh infection (p = 0.004) were significant between non-SSI and SSI cohorts as well as non-SSO and SSO cohorts. Operative characteristics including mesh plane (SSI: p = 0.008; SSO: p < 0.001) and adhesiolysis (SSI: p < 0.001; SSO: p < 0.001) were also significant in similar manner. Youden index of VHRS suggested a score of 7 as the optimal cutoff for increased SSI risk and 6 for SSO risk. The AUC was 0.609 for the VHRS-SSI model and 0.5882 for the VHRS-SSO model. VHWG grade of 3 was the optimal cutoff for both SSI and SSO. Model AUC was 0.616 for VHWG-SSI and 0.614 for VHWG-SSO.

Conclusion: Our study presents the largest external validation cohort for assessing the VHRS model. The VHRS was not superior toc the VHWG for SSI or SSO prediction. While the VHRS was designed for simplicity and basis in obvious patient or operative characteristics, it fails to appropriately weight pre-operative measures and more holistically evaluate clinical factors. Both models have limited predictability and generalizability in patients undergoing ventral hernia repair.

腹壁重建腹壁疝修补:当前模型预测手术部位风险吗?
腹疝修补术(VHR)的并发症造成了严重的医疗负担。因此,风险评估和分层模型被激励以提高成本效益和患者预后。腹侧疝风险评分(VHRS)和腹侧疝工作组分类(VHWG)是试图根据患者特征对手术部位感染(SSI)和手术部位发生(SSO)风险进行分层和预测的指标。我们的研究旨在评估这些模型并评估外部有效性。方法:回顾性回顾2013年10月至2022年8月期间由资深作者进行的所有VHR手术。收集人口统计学、合并症、围手术期和结局相关信息。非SSI和非SSO队列分别与SSI和SSO队列进行比较,以评估患者人口统计学和手术特征可能存在的显著差异。对每位患者应用VHRS和VHWG模型预测风险。各自受试者工作特征(ROC)曲线的约登指数定义了两种模型的最佳评分截止点。曲线下面积(AUC)是评价模型预测质量的指标。结果:共鉴定出1414例VHR患者,其中175例(12.4%)发生SSI, 367例(26.0%)发生SSO。平均随访1.72年[30天,13.65年]。非SSI组和SSI组以及非SSI组和SSO组的患者人口统计数据相似。然而,合并症包括既往非vhr腹部手术(SSI: p)。结论:我们的研究为评估vhr模型提供了最大的外部验证队列。在SSI或SSO预测方面,VHRS并不优于VHWG。虽然VHRS的设计是为了简单和基于明显的患者或手术特征,但它未能适当地权衡术前措施,更全面地评估临床因素。这两种模型在腹疝修补患者中具有有限的可预测性和通用性。
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来源期刊
Hernia
Hernia SURGERY-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
26.10%
发文量
171
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Hernia was founded in 1997 by Jean P. Chevrel with the purpose of promoting clinical studies and basic research as they apply to groin hernias and the abdominal wall . Since that time, a true revolution in the field of hernia studies has transformed the field from a ”simple” disease to one that is very specialized. While the majority of surgeries for primary inguinal and abdominal wall hernia are performed in hospitals worldwide, complex situations such as multi recurrences, complications, abdominal wall reconstructions and others are being studied and treated in specialist centers. As a result, major institutions and societies are creating specific parameters and criteria to better address the complexities of hernia surgery. Hernia is a journal written by surgeons who have made abdominal wall surgery their specific field of interest, but we will consider publishing content from any surgeon who wishes to improve the science of this field. The Journal aims to ensure that hernia surgery is safer and easier for surgeons as well as patients, and provides a forum to all surgeons in the exchange of new ideas, results, and important research that is the basis of professional activity.
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