Abstract

BackgroundParastomal hernia is the most common complication after stoma creation. Parastomal hernias can create significant morbidity, including patient discomfort, small bowel obstruction, and need for emergency surgery. We examined national trends in parastomal hernia repair (PHR) including annual frequency of procedure, patient characteristics, and same-admission complications. Materials and methodsThe 1998-2011 Nationwide Inpatient Sample was used to identify patients who underwent a PHR (International Classification of Disease, Ninth Edition, Procedure Code [ICD-9 PR] 46.42). PHRs were classified as PHR with concurrent resiting (ICD-9 PR 46.43), PHR with concurrent ostomy reversal (ICD-9 PR 46.52 or 46.51), or primary PHR. Patient characteristics were collected. Complications, length of stay, cost and inpatient mortality were identified. ResultsThe estimated number of annual PHRs increased from 4150 to 7623 (P ≤ 0.01) for a total of 73,393 repairs. Thirty percent underwent a concurrent stoma reversal and 10% underwent a resiting. There was an upward trend in number of patients with ≥3 Elixhauser comorbidities (17%-44%, P < 0.01). Length of stay remained steady, with a median of 6.3 d and in-hospital annual mortality ranged from 1.8% to 3.9%. Mortality and emergency admission status were highest for patients who underwent primary PHR. ConclusionsThe incidence of PHR nationwide is increasing and more than half of patients undergo primary repair. Although the surgical focus has moved toward prevention, parastomal hernia is a persistent complication of stoma creation. Further exploration is warranted to determine contributing factors to the observed increase in PHR and changes in surgical technique.

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