Purpose: To retrospectively evaluate experience with percutaneous cecostomies and their long-term outcomes.
Materials And Methods: Between June 1994 and March 2009, 290 patients (mean age, 10.1 y) with fecal incontinence underwent percutaneous cecostomy tube placement and subsequent tube management. Technical success, procedural complications, and long-term follow-up until March 2012 were evaluated.
Results: A cecostomy was successfully placed in 284 patients (98%), and 257 of 280 patients (92%) underwent a successful exchange to a low-profile tube. A total of 1,431 routine exchanges to low-profile tubes were reviewed in 258 patients (mean, 1.6 ± 1.3 routine tube changes per 1,000 days). Eighty-five patients (29%) experienced one or more early problems after cecostomy, and 10 (3%) had major complications. In the total 463,507 tube-days, 938 late problems were noted: 917 (98%) minor and 22 (2%) major. Forty patients had the cecostomy catheter removed and 141 "graduated" to an adult health care facility.
Conclusions: The percutaneous cecostomy procedure provides a safe management option for fecal incontinence in the pediatric population.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvir.2014.10.015 | DOI Listing |
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