4.4 Article

Laparoscopic splenectomy as a definitive management option for high-grade traumatic splenic injury when non operative management is not feasible or failed: a 5-year experience from a level one trauma center with minimally invasive surgery expertise

Journal

UPDATES IN SURGERY
Volume 73, Issue 4, Pages 1515-1531

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s13304-021-01045-z

Keywords

Abdominal trauma; Blunt abdominal trauma; Penetrating abdominal trauma; Trauma laparoscopy; Minimally invasive trauma surgery; Hemodynamic stability; Trauma surgery; Trauma center; Acute care surgery; Emergency laparoscopy; Laparoscopic splenectomy; Angio-embolization; Non-operative management

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Funding

  1. Universita degli Studi dell'Insubria

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The study demonstrates that laparoscopic splenectomy is a safe and effective technique for hemodynamically stable patients with splenic trauma, offering advantages in terms of post-operative recovery and complications, especially in reducing post-operative complications, blood transfusion volume, length of hospital stay, among other factors.
Technique, indications and outcomes of laparoscopic splenectomy in stable trauma patients have not been well described yet. All hemodynamically non-compromised abdominal trauma patients who underwent splenectomy from 1/2013 to 12/2017 at our Level 1 trauma center were included. Demographic and clinical data were collected and analysed with per-protocol and an intention-to-treat comparison between open vs laparoscopic groups. 49 splenectomies were performed (16 laparoscopic, 33 open). Among the laparoscopic group, 81% were successfully completed laparoscopically. Laparoscopy was associated with a higher incidence of concomitant surgical procedures (p 0.016), longer operative times, but a significantly faster return of bowel function and oral diet without reoperations. No significant differences were demonstrated in morbidity, mortality, length of stay, or long-term complications, although laparoscopic had lower surgical site infection (0 vs 21%).The isolated splenic injury sub-analysis included 25 splenectomies,76% (19) open and 24% (6) laparoscopic and confirmed reduction in post-operative morbidity (40 vs 57%), blood transfusion (0 vs 48%), ICU admission (20 vs 57%) and overall LOS (7 vs 9 days) in the laparoscopic group. Laparoscopic splenectomy is a safe and effective technique for hemodynamically stable patients with splenic trauma and may represent an advantageous alternative to open splenectomy in terms of post-operative recovery and morbidity.

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