4.5 Article

Current treatment and outcome of esophageal perforation A single-center experience and a pooled analysis

Journal

MEDICINE
Volume 100, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000025600

Keywords

complication rate; esophageal perforation; mortality rate; pooled analysis; retrospective study

Funding

  1. Self-financing Research Project of Guangxi Health Commission [Z20201315]

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The study analyzed the clinical data of esophageal perforation patients over the past 20 years, finding a decrease in mortality and complication rates over the last decade. Surgical and conservative treatments had overall immediate mortality rates of 10.01% and 6.49% respectively.
Background: Esophageal perforation has been one of the serious clinical emergencies, because of the high mortality and complication rates. However, the current prognosis of esophageal perforation and the outcomes of available treatment methods are not well defined. This study attempted to pool the immediate outcomes of esophageal perforation in the past 2 decades. Methods: The clinical data of 22 consecutive adult patients with esophageal perforation in our center were analyzed. A pooled analysis was also conducted to summarize results from the literatures published between 1999 and 2020. Studies that met the inclusion criteria were assessed, and their methodological quality was examined. Results: The mortality and complication rates in our center were 4.55% and 31.82%, separately. The pooled analysis included 45 studies published between 1999 and 2019, which highlighted an overall immediate mortality rate of 9.86%. Surgical treatments were associated with a pooled immediate mortality of 10.01%, and for conservative treatments of 6.49%. Besides, in the past decade, the mortality and complication rates decreased by 27.12% and 46.75%, respectively. Conclusions: In the past 2 decades, the overall immediate mortality rate of esophageal perforation was about 10% in the worldwide, and the outcomes of esophageal perforation treatment are getting better in the last 10 years. Ethics Registration Information: LW2020011.

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