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Article ; Online: Surgical Management of Hemorrhoidal Disease in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Ugo Grossi / Gaetano Gallo / Gian Luca Di Tanna / Umberto Bracale / Mattia Ballo / Elisa Galasso / Andrea Kazemi Nava / Martino Zucchella / Francesco Cinetto / Marcello Rattazzi / Carla Felice / Giacomo Zanus

Journal of Clinical Medicine, Vol 11, Iss 709, p

A Systematic Review with Proportional Meta-Analysis

2022  Volume 709

Abstract: Surgical treatment of hemorrhoidal disease (HD) in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has been considered to be potentially harmful, but the evidence for this is poor. Therefore, a systematic review of the literature was undertaken to reappraise the safety ...

Abstract Surgical treatment of hemorrhoidal disease (HD) in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has been considered to be potentially harmful, but the evidence for this is poor. Therefore, a systematic review of the literature was undertaken to reappraise the safety and effectiveness of surgical treatments in this special circumstance. A MEDLINE, Web of Science, Scopus, and Cochrane Library search was performed to retrieve studies reporting the outcomes of surgical treatment of HD in patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). From a total of 2072 citations, 10 retrospective studies including 222 (range, 2–70) patients were identified. Of these, 119 (54%) had CD and 103 (46%) UC. Mean age was between 41 and 49 years (range 14–77). Most studies lacked information on the interval between surgery and the onset of complications. Operative treatments included open or closed hemorrhoidectomy ( n = 156 patients (70%)), rubber band ligation ( n = 39 (18%)), excision or incision of thrombosed hemorrhoid ( n = 14 (6%)), and doppler-guided hemorrhoidal artery ligation (DG-HAL, n = 13 (6%)). In total, 23 patients developed a complication (pooled prevalence, 9%; (95%CI, 3–16%)), with a more than two-fold higher rate in patients with CD compared to UC (11% (5–16%) vs. 5% (0–13%), respectively). Despite the low quality evidence, surgical management of HD in IBD and particularly in CD patients who have failed nonoperative therapy should still be performed with caution and limited to inactive disease. Further studies should determine whether advantages in terms of safety and effectiveness with the use of non-excisional techniques (e.g., DG-HAL) can be obtained in this patient population.
Keywords hemorrhoidal disease ; IBD ; Crohn ; ulcerative colitis ; hemorrhoidectomy ; surgery ; Medicine ; R
Subject code 610
Language English
Publishing date 2022-01-01T00:00:00Z
Publisher MDPI AG
Document type Article ; Online
Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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