Prophylactic antibiotics and abdominal drainage in early recovery pathway for hepatectomy
Letter to the Editor

Prophylactic antibiotics and abdominal drainage in early recovery pathway for hepatectomy

Jizhou Wang, Lianxin Liu

Key Laboratory of Hepatosplenic Surgery, Ministry of Education, Department of Hepatic Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Harbin 150001, China

Correspondence to: Lianxin Liu. Key Laboratory of Hepatosplenic Surgery, Ministry of Education, Department of Hepatic Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Harbin 150001, China. Email: liulianxin@ems.hrbmu.edu.cn.

Provenance: This is an invited Letter to the Editor commissioned by Editor-in-Chief Yilei Mao (Department of Liver Surgery, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China).

Response to: Warner SG, Jutric Z, Nisimova L, et al. Early recovery pathway for hepatectomy: data-driven liver resection care and recovery. Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr 2017;6:297-311.


Submitted Feb 04, 2018. Accepted for publication Mar 16, 2018.

doi: 10.21037/hbsn.2018.03.09


Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols have been pioneered by Kehlet and include multimodal perioperative care to reduce complications rate, cost and hospital stay. The paper “Early recovery pathway for hepatectomy: data-driven liver resection care and recovery” by Warner and colleagues attempt to formulate a pathway for practice based on data to allow creation of rational order sets for efficient and superior practice (1).

Liver surgery is classified as clean-contaminated surgery because the bile duct is dissected. The Table 7 in the protocol suggests single dose antibiotics within 30 minutes of incision. However, there is no clear evidence for the use of antimicrobial prophylaxis in liver surgery (2,3). An Cochrane meta-analysis including 7 RCTs showed that no antimicrobial method could improve outcomes after hepatectomy (4). Indeed, preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis is administered routinely in many liver surgery centers. However, most of these results were based on uncontrolled retrospective studies (5). A recent prospective RCT showed that prophylactic antibiotics resulted in no statistically significant benefit for total infections, surgical site infection and remote site infection (5). The findings may attribute to the progressively improved surgical technique and other non-antibiotic-based physical prophylactic procedures, as infectious complications are usually related to technical pitfalls rather than the use of prophylactic antibiotics.

Long operation time, blood transfusion and bile leakage are independent risk factors for infectious complications. The development of techniques for liver parenchymal transaction in recent years has dramatically improved the previous risk factors. Pneumonia is the most common remote site infection after hepatectomy and routine nasogastric decompression is an independent risk factor (6). In ERAS protocol, the abandoning of post-operative nasogastric tube will also decrease the risk of infectious complications of liver surgery. Thus, we believe pre-op prophylactic usage of antibiotics is not an essential part to prevent infection in selective hepatectomy. Even for patients undergoing hepatectomy with extrahepatic bile duct resection, two-day administration of antimicrobial prophylaxis is sufficient (7).

A meta-analysis published in 2004 provided the strongest evidence to omit routine prophylactic drainage after major abdominal surgery (8), although only 3 RCTs on liver resection with low sample size were included in this meta-analysis. Furthermore, several retrospective cohort studies and randomized controlled trials have suggested that abdominal drainage after liver resection may increase the risk of complications such as wound infection, retrograde abdominal infection, and ascitic fluid leakage. The protocol in Warner’s paper also suggests no routine abdominal drainage in both minor and major liver resection. However, many hepatic surgeons still continue to use routine drainage after hepatic resection for early detection of hemorrhage or bile leakage and reduce need for re-intervention in clinical practice. A retrospective cohort study including 1,269 consecutive elective liver resections assessed the value of prophylactic drainage and found that prophylactic drainage could reduce the frequency of subphrenic abscess and biliary fistula or biloma formation (9). Inoue et al. found that 20.9% of patients in the non-drainage group underwent postoperative percutaneous drainage insertion which was considerably high (10).

Till now, there is inconclusive evidence and no recommendation for the use of prophylactic drainage or against it after hepatectomy. Therefore, we think the prophylactic drainage should depend on the type of hepatic resection, the condition of the patients and the experience of the surgeons. Meanwhile, the timing of drain removal on the incidence of retrograde infection should also be considered. Several studies have illustrated the criteria for drain removal after liver resection based on fluid volume and drain fluid bilirubin level, and the time is mainly on post-operative day 3 (11-13).


Acknowledgements

None.


Footnote

Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.


References

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Cite this article as: Wang J, Liu L. Prophylactic antibiotics and abdominal drainage in early recovery pathway for hepatectomy. Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr 2018;7(2):156-157. doi: 10.21037/hbsn.2018.03.09

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