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Published in: European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery 3/2022

13-03-2021 | Original Article

Bovine versus porcine acellular dermal matrix for abdominal wall herniorrhaphy or bridging

Authors: Kathryn Van Orden, Jeffrey Santos, Brent Stanfield, Landon S. Frost, Alexander Ruditsky, Andrea Foster, Tejal S. Brahmbhatt, Peter A. Burke, Joseph Fernandez-Moure, Krista Haines, Suresh Agarwal, George Kasotakis

Published in: European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery | Issue 3/2022

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Abstract

Background

The management of complicated ventral hernias (CVH), namely ventral hernias in actively or recently infected/contaminated operative fields, and open abdomens in which the native fascia cannot be primarily reapproximated, pose a surgical challenge. Fetal Bovine and Porcine Acellular Dermal Matrix (BADM and PADM) biologic meshes are being increasingly used in these scenarios. A comparison, however, of clinically relevant outcomes between the two is lacking. With this investigation, we aim to review and compare clinically relevant outcomes in patients that underwent abdominal wall herniorrhaphy with either BADM or PADM at a tertiary urban academic institution over a 5-year period.

Methods

Patients who had a BADM or PADM implanted during CVH over a 5-year period at a tertiary urban academic hospital were identified. Baseline clinical and hernia characteristics, as well as postoperative outcomes were compared after a retrospective chart review. Phone interviews were also conducted to assess for recurrence, followed by in-person visits as indicated. Cox Proportional Hazard regression was fitted to identify risk factors for recurrence.

Results

Of the 140 patients who underwent biologic mesh implantation for CVH, 109 were for ventral hernia repair and 31 for open abdomen bridging. Mean age was 52.7 ± 14.2 and males constituted 57.9% of our sample, while 25.1% had undergone > 5 prior abdominal operations. Thirty percent were active smokers, and another 30% required emergency surgery. Only immunosuppression was a risk factor for recurrence [HR 13.3 (1.04–169.2), p = 0.047] on Cox Proportional Hazard regression, while mesh selection had no effect.

Conclusions

Both BADM and PADM meshes perform well in CVH, with satisfactory recurrence rates, only slightly higher compared to traditional synthetic mesh repairs.
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Metadata
Title
Bovine versus porcine acellular dermal matrix for abdominal wall herniorrhaphy or bridging
Authors
Kathryn Van Orden
Jeffrey Santos
Brent Stanfield
Landon S. Frost
Alexander Ruditsky
Andrea Foster
Tejal S. Brahmbhatt
Peter A. Burke
Joseph Fernandez-Moure
Krista Haines
Suresh Agarwal
George Kasotakis
Publication date
13-03-2021
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery / Issue 3/2022
Print ISSN: 1863-9933
Electronic ISSN: 1863-9941
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00068-021-01641-z

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