Abstract

Although inguinal hernia repair in female patients is less common than in male patients, it remains a frequent procedure. The decision to divide or preserve the round ligament has largely been left to surgeon preference, but little data exists about its impact on outcomes. This study aimed to describe current practices for round ligament management and identify the impact of division on surgical and patient-reported outcomes. The 2013 to 2021 Abdominal Core Health Quality Collaborative database was queried for all female patients undergoing inguinal hernia repair with 30-day patient-reported outcome data available. Comparison groups were created based on round ligament management: round ligament division (RLD) or round ligament preservation (RLP). We identified 1365 female patients who underwent open (36.3%), laparoscopic (34.5%), or robotic (28.2%) repair. Most were non-recurrent (93%) and unilateral (82.6%). The round ligament was divided in 868 (63.6%) and preserved in 497 (36.4%) cases. There were no significant differences in overall complications (RLD 7.1%, RLP 5.2%, p = 0.17), reoperation (RLD 0.5%, RLP 0.2%, p = 0.4), or recurrence (RLD 0.1%, RLP 0.4%, p = 0.28). Mean European Registry for Abdominal Wall Hernias quality of life summary scores were not significantly different at 30 days (RLD 27.2, RLP 27.8) or 6 months (RLD 12.8, RLP 17.1). However, a significant difference was found in terms of mean pain-specific scores at 6 months, with lower pain scores in the RLD group (3 vs 4.7, p < 0.01), which persisted on multivariable analysis (p = 0.02). RLD is a common practice and is not associated with increased complications or recurrence. Although there is some evidence that RLD may result in decreased pain at 6 months, this must be balanced with potential functional complications of division that are not fully studied in this paper.

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