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Endocrine, MIS, Breast, and Education Research in Surgery

Impact of preoperative biliary drainage on 30 Day outcomes of patients undergoing pancreaticoduodenectomy for malignancy.


Journal article


G. Werba, M. Napolitano, A. Sparks, P. Lin, L. Johnson, K. Vaziri
HPB, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Werba, G., Napolitano, M., Sparks, A., Lin, P., Johnson, L., & Vaziri, K. (2021). Impact of preoperative biliary drainage on 30 Day outcomes of patients undergoing pancreaticoduodenectomy for malignancy. HPB.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Werba, G., M. Napolitano, A. Sparks, P. Lin, L. Johnson, and K. Vaziri. “Impact of Preoperative Biliary Drainage on 30 Day Outcomes of Patients Undergoing Pancreaticoduodenectomy for Malignancy.” HPB (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Werba, G., et al. “Impact of Preoperative Biliary Drainage on 30 Day Outcomes of Patients Undergoing Pancreaticoduodenectomy for Malignancy.” HPB, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{g2021a,
  title = {Impact of preoperative biliary drainage on 30 Day outcomes of patients undergoing pancreaticoduodenectomy for malignancy.},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {HPB},
  author = {Werba, G. and Napolitano, M. and Sparks, A. and Lin, P. and Johnson, L. and Vaziri, K.}
}

Abstract

BACKGROUND Preoperative biliary drainage (PBD) has been advocated to address the plethora of physiologic derangements associated with cholestasis. However, available literature reports mixed outcomes and is based on largely outdated and/or single-institution studies.

METHODS Patients undergoing PBD prior to pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD) for periampullary malignancy between 2014-2018 were identified in the ACS-NSQIP pancreatectomy dataset. Patients with PBD were propensity-score-matched to those without PBD and 30-day outcomes compared.

RESULTS 8,970 patients met our inclusion criteria. 4,473 with obstruction and PBD were matched to 829 with no preoperative drainage procedure. In the non-jaundiced cohort, 711 stented patients were matched to 2,957 without prior intervention. PBD did not influence 30-day mortality (2.2% versus 2.4%) or major morbidity (19.8% versus 20%) in patients with obstructive jaundice. Superficial surgical site infections (SSIs) were more common with PBD (6.8% versus 9.2%), however, no differences in deep or organ-space SSIs were found. Patients without obstruction prior to PBD exhibited a 3-fold increase in wound dehiscence (0.5% versus 1.5%) additionally to increased superficial SSIs.

CONCLUSION PBD was not associated with an increase in 30-day mortality or major morbidity but increased superficial SSIs. PBD should be limited to symptomatic, profoundly jaundiced patients or those with a delay prior to PD.