Colorectal Perforation in Patients with Connective Tissue Disease

Joint Authors

Kawano, Shingo
Sakamoto, Kazuhiro
Tamura, Naoto
Takahashi, Rina
Sugimoto, Kiichi
Okazawa, Yu
Takahashi, Makoto
Kojima, Yutaka
Tomiki, Yuichi
Kawai, Masaya
Mizukoshi, Kosuke
Ro, Hisashi
Munakata, Shinya
Kamiyama, Hirohiko
Ishiyama, Shun

Source

Emergency Medicine International

Issue

Vol. 2019, Issue 2019 (31 Dec. 2019), pp.1-9, 9 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2019-06-19

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

9

Main Subjects

Medicine

Abstract EN

Purpose.

The goal of this retrospective study was to identify prognostic factors associated with mortality after surgery for colorectal perforation among patients with connective tissue disease (CTD) and to review postoperative outcomes based on these prognostic factors.

Methods.

The subjects were 105 patients (CTD group: n=26, 24.8%; non-CTD group: n=79, 75.2%) who underwent surgery for colorectal perforation at our department.

Cases with iatrogenic perforation due to colonoscopic examination were excluded from the study.

We retrospectively investigated perioperative clinicopathological factors in patients undergoing surgery for colorectal perforation.

Results.

There were 7 patients (6.7%) who died within 28 days after surgery in all patients.

In multivariate analysis, CTD and fecal peritonitis emerged as significant independent prognostic factors (p=0.005, odds ratio=12.39; p=0.04, odds ratio=7.10, respectively).

There were 5 patients (19.2%) who died within 28 days after surgery in the CTD group.

In multivariate analysis, fecal peritonitis emerged as a significant independent prognostic factor in the CTD group (p=0.03, odds ratio=31.96).

The cumulative survival curve in the CTD group was significantly worse than that in the non-CTD group (p=0.006).

An analysis based on the presence of fecal peritonitis indicated no significant difference in cumulative survival curves for patients without fecal peritonitis in the CTD and non-CTD groups (p=0.55) but a significant difference in these curves for patients with fecal peritonitis in the two groups (p<0.0001).

Conclusions.

This study demonstrated that cumulative survival in patients with CTD is significantly worse than that in patients without CTD after surgery for colorectal perforation.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Sugimoto, Kiichi& Sakamoto, Kazuhiro& Okazawa, Yu& Takahashi, Rina& Mizukoshi, Kosuke& Ro, Hisashi…[et al.]. 2019. Colorectal Perforation in Patients with Connective Tissue Disease. Emergency Medicine International،Vol. 2019, no. 2019, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1152249

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Sugimoto, Kiichi…[et al.]. Colorectal Perforation in Patients with Connective Tissue Disease. Emergency Medicine International No. 2019 (2019), pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1152249

American Medical Association (AMA)

Sugimoto, Kiichi& Sakamoto, Kazuhiro& Okazawa, Yu& Takahashi, Rina& Mizukoshi, Kosuke& Ro, Hisashi…[et al.]. Colorectal Perforation in Patients with Connective Tissue Disease. Emergency Medicine International. 2019. Vol. 2019, no. 2019, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1152249

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1152249