AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to assess the effectiveness and impact of minimally invasive pancreatoduodenectomy (MIPD) compared to open pancreatoduodenectomy (OPD) on patients' nutrition and immune response post-surgery.
  • Out of 306 patients analyzed, MIPD showed significant benefits over OPD, including less blood loss, fewer transfusions, shorter hospital stays, and fewer complications, though it had a longer operation time.
  • Despite these surgical advantages, nutritional and immunological outcomes, such as albumin levels and other indices, were similar between the two surgical methods.

Article Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the feasibility and clinical impact of minimally invasive pancreatoduodenectomy (MIPD) versus open pancreatoduodenectomy (OPD) on postoperative nutritional and immunological indices.

Background: The surgical advantages of MIPD over OPD are controversial, and the postoperative nutritional and immunological statuses are unknown.

Methods: In total, 306 patients who underwent MIPD (n = 120) or OPD (n = 186) for periampullary tumors from April 2016 to February 2024 were analyzed. Surgical outcomes and postoperative nutritional and immunological indices (albumin, prognostic nutritional index [PNI], neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio [NLR], and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio [PLR]) were examined by 1:1 propensity score matching (PSM) with well-matched background characteristics.

Results: PSM resulted in 2 balanced groups of 99 patients each. Compared with OPD, MIPD was significantly associated with less estimated blood loss ( < 0.0001), fewer intraoperative blood transfusions ( = 0.001), longer operative time, shorter postoperative hospital stay ( < 0.0001), fewer postoperative complications ( = 0.001) (especially clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula [ = 0.018]), and a higher rate of textbook outcome achievement (70.7% vs 48.5%, = 0.001). The number of dissected lymph nodes and the R0 resection rate did not differ between the 2 groups. In elective cases with textbook outcome achievement, the change rates of albumin, PNI, NLR, and PLR from before to after surgery were equivalent in both groups.

Conclusions: MIPD has several surgical advantages (excluding a prolonged operative time), and it enhances the achievement of textbook outcomes over OPD. However, the postoperative nutritional and immunological statuses are equivalent for both procedures.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11415100PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AS9.0000000000000487DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

postoperative nutritional
20
nutritional immunological
20
immunological statuses
12
minimally invasive
8
versus open
8
open pancreatoduodenectomy
8
surgical outcomes
8
postoperative
8
outcomes postoperative
8
opd postoperative
8

Similar Publications

Feeding jejunostomy is a simple and common procedure used to provide enteral nutrition. Acute intestinal intussusception on a jejunostomy tube is a rare complication that can have catastrophic consequences and often requires urgent surgical intervention. We report the case of a 45-year-old female patient with a stenosing hypopharyngeal tumor leading to complete aphagia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Tolerance of enteral nutrition following percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy is a barrier to discharge. This study investigated the impact of an expedited feeding protocol following percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy on postprocedure length of stay (LOS).

Methods: We performed a before-and-after cohort study on hospitalized adults in whom percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy was placed by surgeons following the implementation of a standardized feeding protocol in which enteral feeds were resumed at the preoperative rate 6 h later.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Geriatric nutritional risk index as a predictor of major postoperative complications in emergency femoral hernia patients.

BMC Surg

December 2024

Department of Hernia and Abdominal Wall Surgery, Beijing Chaoyang Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, 100043, China.

Background: To evaluate the prognostic values of GNRI for major postoperative complications in emergency femoral hernia patients.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study, we enrolled 105 emergency femoral hernia patients. GNRI was calculated using preoperative body weight, height, and serum albumin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effectiveness of Postoperative Dietary Intervention in Patients with Gastric Cancer who Underwent Gastrectomy: Quasi-Experimental Study Design.

Semin Oncol Nurs

December 2024

College of Nursing, Research Institute of Nursing Innovation, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, South Korea. Electronic address:

Objectives: This article aims to investigate the effects of a postoperative dietary intervention on fatigue, self-efficacy in managing gastrointestinal side effects, self-efficacy for nutritional management, self-care activity, and unmet nursing needs among patients with gastric cancer who have undergone gastrectomy.

Methods: We used a quasi-experimental study design (nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest). Data were collected from 59 patients with gastric cancer (30 in the experimental group and 29 in the control patients) hospitalized for gastrectomy in Daegu, South Korea.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To evaluate the safety, effectiveness, and long-term efficacy of the Jinling procedure for management of refractory mixed constipation. We prospectively collected clinical data of patients with refractory mixed constipation treated by the Jinling procedure in the Institute of General Surgery of our hospital from January 2007 to August 2023. Perioperative complications, effectiveness within 1 year of surgery (as assessed by the Wexner constipation score, gastrointestinal quality of life index, frequency of spontaneous defecation, rate of satisfactory defecation, body composition, serological indicators, defecography, anorectal manometry) and 10 years after surgery (as assessed by the Wexner constipation score, patient assessment of constipation symptom, SF-36 quality of life score, and questionnaire concerning satisfaction with defecation).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!