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Risk factors for developing high-output ileostomy in CRC patients: a retrospective study

Dongxiao Bai, Lei Li, Zhiling Shen, Tianchen Huang, Qingbing Wang, Yanjun Wang, Yong Zhang, Zhi‐Peng Guo, Kan Li, Jian Xiao

2021BMC Surgery15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Anastomotic leakage is one of the most serious postoperative complications of rectal cancer. Prophylactic ileostomy has been widely used to reduce the risk and severity of complications of anastomotic leakage. However, prophylactic ileostomy itself has some complications, and ileostomy high output syndrome (HOS) is one of them. This study was performed to explore the risk factors of HOS in ileostomy. METHODS: A total of 114 patients with HOS were screened out from 494 eligible ileostomy patients in the last 5 years. The relationship between HOS and the clinicopathological data was analyzed using the Chi-square test and Fisher's exact probability. Multivariate analysis was performed by logistic regression. RESULTS: The incidence of HOS was 23.07% in this study. Dehydration was the most common symptom of HOS (37.7%). There was no clear correlation between HOS occurrence with sex, age, gross typing, histological grade, tumor location, lymph node metastasis, and TNM stage (p > 0.05). The incidence of HOS was 14/18 in inflammatory bowel disease patients, 18/28 in diabetes mellitus patients, and 23/72 in neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy patients, 13/17 in total colectomy and abdominal infection patients. Multivariate analysis showed that they are risk factors for HOS (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: HOS occurred occasionally but rarely studied and lacks attention. Inflammatory bowel disease, diabetes mellitus, neoadjuvant radiotherapy chemotherapy, total colectomy and abdominal infection are the risk factors for HOS.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineIleostomyColorectal cancerIncidence (geometry)Internal medicineSurgeryColectomyStage (stratigraphy)Logistic regressionExact testGastroenterologyCancerPhysicsOpticsBiologyPaleontologyStoma care and complicationsColorectal Cancer Surgical TreatmentsDiverticular Disease and Complications