Abstract

Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the apocrine sweat glands. Although the mainstay of surgical treatment is excision, the disease has a high tendency to recur, for reasons that are not well understood. We sought to better characterize the natural history of this disease, focusing on patients who required operative intervention. Two hundred and fourteen patients with axillary HS underwent 293 surgical procedures. We divided the cohort into two groups based on recurrence and then compared them to identify the factors most associated with recurrent axillary HS. Mean age of onset of HS was 32.1 years. The patients were overwhelmingly female (84.1%), black (93%), and obese (average body mass index = 33.4). Of them, 35.5 per cent of the patients had bilateral axillary disease and 8.4 per cent had extra-axillary disease. Of the 214 patients, 22 (10.3%) had recurrent disease. The vast majority of interventions included excision of disease (median area = 78.6 cm2). Closure versus nonclosure was not associated with a proclivity toward recurrence. The patients with HS were overwhelmingly obese and female, and many of them smoked. Surgical excision was the most common intervention and closure was used in roughly half of the patients. Recurrence after excision was not associated with extra-axillary disease and did not seem to correlate with the manner in which the wounds were managed after excision. Weight loss and smoking cessation may play a more significant role in the prevention of recurrence of HS than surgical treatment alone.

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