1. Extended Experience with a Dynamic, Data-Driven Selective Drain Management Protocol in Pancreaticoduodenectomy: Progressive Risk Stratification for Better Practice.
- Author
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Trudeau MT, Maggino L, Chen B, McMillan MT, Lee MK, Roses R, DeMatteo R, Drebin JA, and Vollmer CM Jr
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Clinical Protocols, Drainage standards, Drainage statistics & numerical data, Female, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Humans, Intraoperative Care standards, Intraoperative Care statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Pancreatic Fistula epidemiology, Pancreatic Fistula etiology, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Treatment Outcome, Clinical Decision Rules, Clinical Decision-Making methods, Drainage methods, Intraoperative Care methods, Pancreatic Fistula prevention & control, Pancreaticoduodenectomy, Postoperative Complications prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Intraoperative drain use for pancreaticoduodenectomy has been practiced in an unconditional, binary manner (placement/no placement). Alternatively, dynamic drain management has been introduced, incorporating the Fistula Risk Score (FRS) and drain fluid amylase (DFA) analysis, to mitigate clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula (CR-POPF)., Study Design: An extended experience with dynamic drain management was used at a single institution for 400 consecutive pancreaticoduodenectomies (2014 to 2019). This protocol consists of the following: drains omitted for negligible/low-risk FRS (0 to 2) and drains placed for moderate/high-risk FRS (3 to 10) with early (postoperative day [POD] 3) removal if POD1 DFA ≤5,000 U/L. Adherence to this protocol was prospectively annotated and outcomes were retrospectively analyzed., Results: The overall CR-POPF rate was 8.7%, with none occurring in the negligible/low-risk cases. Moderate/high-risk patients manifested an 11.9% CR-POPF rate (n = 35 of 293), which was lower on-protocol (9.5% vs 21%; p = 0.014). After drain placement, POD1 DFA ≥5,000 U/L was a better predictor of CR-POPF than FRS (odds ratio 14.7; 95% CI, 4.3 to 50.3). For POD1 DFA ≤5,000 U/L, early drain removal was associated with fewer CR-POPFs (2.8% vs 23.5%; p < 0.001), and substantiated by multivariable analysis (odds ratio 0.09; 95% CI, 0.03 to 0.28). Surgeon adherence was inversely related to CR-POPF rate (R = 0.846)., Conclusions: This extended experience validates a dynamic drain management protocol, providing a model for better drain management and individualized patient care after pancreaticoduodenectomy. This study confirms that drains can be safely omitted from negligible/low-risk patients, and moderate/high-risk patients benefit from early drain removal., (Copyright © 2020 American College of Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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