Abstract

The aim of the present study was to document long-term clinical recurrence and re-resection rates of segmental and extended colectomy in patients with Crohn's colitis and to identify risk factors causing recurrence. Records of patients with isolated colonic Crohn's disease who underwent colectomy between 1995 and 2013 and were followed at our medical center were identified. Data on age at diagnosis, gender, smoking, disease location at diagnosis, perianal and rectal disease, indication for surgery, preoperative disease duration, type of operation, primary anastomosis at first operation, length of resected specimen, recurrence of symptoms, postoperative medication, reoperation, and total follow-up time were retrieved. Thirty-five suitable patients (18 segmental colectomy, 17 extensive colectomy; 17 males; mean age at operation 36.6years) were identified. Mean age at primary operation was 36years. The mean preoperative disease duration was 121months. Postoperative medical treatment was needed in 10 (56%) patients undergoing segmental colectomy and in 16 (94%) of those undergoing extensive colectomy (p=0.01). There was longer reoperation-free survival in the segmental colectomy patient group (p=0.02) and also a trend toward longer symptom-free survival compared to the extensive colectomy patient group (p=0.105). There was no correlation between the length of resected bowel and recurrence. Patients operated on at a younger age did not have a higher rate of recurrence of symptoms. Shorter disease duration, smoking, and male gender were risk factors for clinical recurrence. Segmental resection with primary anastomosis can be safely performed in patients with limited Crohn's colitis with reasonable clinical recurrence rates.

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