Factors affecting recurrence after surgical treatment of Crohn disease

1995 
Surgery does not cure Crohn's disease, but only its complications, as the recurrence rate that requires a new intervention is 6% per year. The resections performed by the surgeon should be as limited as possible, in order to avoid the consequent malabsorption. The identification of two forms of Crohn's disease, with different aggressiveness, has found that the stricturoplastic is an encouraging way of treatment for those forms with a prevalent stenotic component. A lot of studies have evaluated the relationships between recurrences and resections on margins microscopically free or affected by the disease. The aim of this study was a retrospective verification of the influence of any possible microscopical residue of the disease on the recurrence rate, evaluating whether the two different forms of aggressiveness of the disease (presence of stenosis or fistula) can influence the rate and precocity of the recurrence onset. In 37 patients operated for the first time of ileal or ileocolic resection, the overall recurrence rate was 18.9%; neither the presence of microscopically affected margins nor the presence of fistulas or stenosis has showed to have an influence on the onset of the recurrences. The only data that emerged is a greater precocity of the onset of recurrence in those patients whose disease was characterised by the presence of enteric fistulas. The forms in which fistulas and perforations were evident showed a recurrence rate not significantly higher than that of forms with stenosis only, but the period of time free from the disease was notably longer for the latter. In the end, patients in which typical granulomas were present showed a recurrence rate of just 9%, compared to 23% of patients in which granulomas were absent. MATERIALS AND METHODS. From 1980 through 1992, 61 patients affected by Crohn's disease were operated. There were 39 men and 22 women (mean age: 40.4 years). The mean length of the follow-up was 55.5 months. It was the first operation for 43 patients, while 9 had already undergone surgery in other hospitals; 9 patients showed anorectal complications. The operations performed on the patients for the first time have been ileal resection in the following localizations: duodenum-jejunum 4, jejunum and ileal 34, colic 5; the recurrences treated have been ileal-jejunum in 7 cases and colic in 2. In 2 cases of recurrence a stricturoplastic has been performed. RESULTS. The operative mortality was of 3 patients: 2 due to sepsis for anastomotic dehiscence and 1 to systemic mycosis. Four postoperative fistulas were observed. Recurrence of the disease occurred in 13 patients (26.5%), specifically in 21.4% of the patients operated for the first time and in 57.1% of those that were operated for recurrences. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS. In the treatment of Crohn's disease, it is important to identify any possible group with high risk of recurrence in order to undertake an appropriate medical prophylaxis. The results concerning the presence of microscopical disease on the resection margins are today still controversial. Some groups of authors prefer wide resection margins, some others are in favour of restricted resections. Our considerations let us assert that in those patients in which the resections have been performed on margins with microscopic presence of the disease, the interval before the recurrence occurs is not significantly shorter than that of patients with free margins. But the patients suffering from Crohn's disease with fistulae, probably need medical post-operative therapy to delay recurrences onset.
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