Short- and long-term outcomes of laser haemorrhoidoplasty for grade II-III haemorrhoidal disease.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_D687767AA028
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Short- and long-term outcomes of laser haemorrhoidoplasty for grade II-III haemorrhoidal disease.
Journal
Colorectal disease
Author(s)
Faes S., Pratsinis M., Hasler-Gehrer S., Keerl A., Nocito A.
ISSN
1463-1318 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1462-8910
Publication state
Published
Issued date
06/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
21
Number
6
Pages
689-696
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Laser haemorrhoidoplasty is associated with minimal postoperative pain and good symptom improvement in the short-term. However, less is known about its long-term efficacy. This study aims to determine the short- and long-term outcomes of laser haemorrhoidoplasty.
Between October 2010 and May 2012, 50 consecutive patients with grade II-III haemorrhoids were treated with laser haemorrhoidoplasty. Short-term follow-up was assessed on days 1, 30 and 60 and long-term follow-up was at 5 years (haemorrhoidal stage reduction, pain, patient satisfaction, symptom improvement, incapacity for work, continence, complications, recurrence).
Short-term follow-up was achieved for all patients and long-term follow-up for 44/50 patients (88%). At short-term follow-up, haemorrhoidal stage reduction was documented in 49 (98%) patients. Complete or good symptom improvement was reported by 36/50 (72%) and 10/50 patients (20%) at 60 days. Postoperative complications occurred in 9/50 patients (18%) with three Clavien-Dindo grade IIIb complications (two fistulas, one incontinence), one grade IIIa (perianal thrombosis) and five grade I (one perianal thrombosis, two perianal eczema, one local bleeding, one anal fissure). Postoperative pain was low (visual analogue scale 0-1) at day 1 in 37/50 (74%), at day 30 in 47/50 (94%) and at day 60 in 50/50 patients (100%). After a mean follow-up of 5.4 years (SD 5.4 months) the recurrence rate was 34% (15/44 patients) with a median time to recurrence of 21 months (range 0.2-6 years).
Although laser haemorrhoidoplasty achieves a high short-term success rate with respect to stage reduction and symptom improvement, it is associated with a high rate of minor postoperative complications and long-term recurrence. Therefore, laser haemorrhoidoplasty should be used with caution.
Keywords
Laserhaemorrhoidoplasty, haemorrhoids, laser surgery, long-term outcome of haemorrhoidectomy, minimal invasive haemorrhoidectomy
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
25/03/2019 9:54
Last modification date
27/10/2020 7:23
Usage data