Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4290459 Journal of the American College of Surgeons 2016 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundNon-crosslinked porcine acellular dermal grafts (NCPADG) are currently the mainstay biomaterial for abdominal wall reconstruction (AWR) in complex hernia patients. We report early clinical outcomes using a novel rifampin/minocycline-coated NCPADG for AWR.Study DesignA multi-institutional retrospective review was performed of patients who underwent ventral hernia repair using XenMatrix AB Surgical Graft (CR Bard, Inc [Davol]). Patient demographics, hernia and procedure characteristics, and surgical site occurrences/postoperative complications were reviewed up to 6 months after AWR.ResultsSeventy-four patients underwent AWR using XenMatrix AB Surgical Graft. Open AWR was performed in 52 patients (70.3%), and 22 patients (29.7%) underwent laparoscopic VHR. Median hernia size/area was 66.0 cm2 (range 9.4 to 294.5 cm2). Sixteen patients (21.6%) had previous wound infections, and 16 patients (21.6%) had violation of the gastrointestinal tract during hernia repair. The most common locations of NCPADG placement were within the intraperitoneal (32.4%) and onlay (21.6%) positions, respectively. Median hospital length of stay was 4 days. Within 30 days after AWR, 6 (8.1%) patients were readmitted, postoperative seroma formation developed in 4 (5.4%) patients, 1 patient required percutaneous drainage, and surgical site infections developed in 5 (6.8%) patients. At 6 months follow-up, hernia recurrence had developed in 4 (5.4%) patients.ConclusionsData suggest that use of a novel rifampin/minocycline-coated NCPADG was associated with a low rate of postoperative surgical site occurrences/postoperative complications during the first 30 days of follow-up in complex AWR patients. In addition, data suggest a low rate of hernia recurrence at 6-month follow-up. Additional study is warranted to determine whether early antimicrobial protection of the device translates into longer-term protection of the repair.

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