Abstract

The purpose of the study was to identify risk factors for early clinical and surgical recurrence in Crohn's disease (CD) patients who underwent intestinal resection. This was a retrospective study. Consecutive patients who underwent intestinal resection with a primary anastomosis from January 2011-December 2014 were enrolled. Gender, age at surgery, clinical phenotypes of CD, serum albumin and C-reactive protein level the day before surgery, smoking status at surgery, anastomosis technique, number of anastomoses, details of postoperative complications, the postoperative prophylactic treatment were assessed to figure out risk factors for postoperative clinical and surgical recurrence within 1year after the initial resection by univariate and then multivariate analysis. Two hundred and thirty-seven patients were analyzed. The risk of early postoperative clinical recurrence was 2.99 times higher in patients suffered postoperative infectious complications [odds ratio (OR) 2.99; 95% CIs, 1.42-6.32; p=0.004], while never-smoking was found to be a protective factor for early clinical recurrence (OR 0.326; 95% CIs, 0.18-0.59; p<0.0001). For surgical recurrence within 1year after resection, the presence of postoperative intra-abdominal septic complications might be a risk factor (OR 6.77; 95% CIs, 1.61-28.5; p=0.009). Smoker at surgery was also a risk factor for early surgical recurrence (OR 5.41; 95% CIs, 1.36-21.5; p=0.017). The presence of postoperative infectious complications was identified as a possible risk factor for early postoperative clinical recurrence after resection in CD patients.

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