Abdominal and pelvic adhesions: Possible role of leiomyomas and skin scar anomaly in profiling high risk patients ()
KEYWORDS
Peritoneum; Peritoneal Adhesions; Abdominal Adhesions; Abdominal Surgery; Leiomyomas; Skin Scar; Kinshasa
1. INTRODUCTION
Abdominal and pelvic adhesions (APA) are abnormal connections between two abdominal or pelvic surfaces normally separated [1]. Their incidence is difficult to establish in general population given the lack of complaints in many cases [2,3], the existence of other risk factors apart from the evident surgical one [2,4,5], and the need for invasive explorations to their diagnosis. Laparotomy and laparoscopy remain then the gold standard methods for the diagnosis [6]. Thus, data reported in literature are those from surgery or necropsy, and the overall incidence of postoperative adhesions varies from 63% to 97% [4,7].
Adhesions can cause important morbidity including abdominal and pelvic pain, intestinal obstructions, and infertility [8]. In fact, they are the leading cause of intestinal obstructions in developed world [9] and are responsible for 20% - 40% of infertility [5,10]. In addition to their morbidity, they may also result in prolonged operating time, inadvertent organs injuries and high financial cost [8,11].
In their genesis, they can be classified as congenital or acquired [7,12,13]. The risk factors for acquired adhesions encompass an intrinsic individual predisposition [14-16] and a history of laparotomy, perforated appendix, intestinal inflammatory disease, endometriosis and pelvic inflammatory disease [17-20].
When adhesions are formed, there is no efficient method, nowadays, to resolve them [21]. The reduction of their prevalence should then rely on the prevention, stressing on the profile of high risk patients, on the principles of microsurgery [4,12,22] and on the use of multiple preventive therapies which are expensive and not always available in many settings.
Differences are observed on the conditions of surgical practice and the environmental factors from one region of the world to another, and this could presage variability in some characteristics of adhesions. Sub Saharan African environmental situation, particularly related to surgical practice [23,24] and other factors such as postoperative infections [24], sexually transmitted infections [25] etc., might predict high prevalence of adhesions. In addition, some conditions such as leiomyomas and keloids, whose prevalence has been found higher in black skinned people [26], share many characteristics with adhesions [27]. Since one of the implicated factors of these is the fibroblast activity, it can be speculated that the prevalence of adhesions traces the same pattern.
The aim of the study was to determine the risk factors of adhesions in our institution, and to determine the association between APA and two pathologies with fibrotic disorder: leiomyomas and skin scar anomaly (SSA).
2. MATERIAL AND METHODS
We conducted a cross-sectional study from March 1st to June 30th 2013 in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the University Hospital of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. All patients who underwent laparotomy or laparoscopy for various indications were enrolled after consent. Patients whose surgery did not allow entire exploration of the pelvic and abdominal cavity were excluded. Socioeconomic characteristics, medical and surgical histories of patients were recorded. During surgical procedure the presence of adhesions and leiomyomas was noted. The adhesions description was done according to the Adhesion Scoring Group grading (ASG) [28].
Previous abdominal surgery (PAS) was defined as all surgical procedure in the past, with entry into the pelvic or abdominal cavity. Age of adhesions was defined as the time between the last abdominal surgery and the present surgery. According to their severity, based on the ASG grading, adhesions were divided into three groups: mild (1 - 46), moderate (47 - 92) and severe (93 - 138). The economic status was defined according to the Adjusted Poverty Index (API) based on the possession of some items by the household. A SSA was retained when patients had keloids or hypertrophic scar.
2.1. Statistical Analysis
The Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 17.0. For parametric data, with normal distribution, comparison of means was done with Student’s t test. The Pearson Khi-square and the Fisher’s Exact tests were used for comparison of proportions. In bivariate analysis, the Odds Ratio with 95% confidence intervals (CI) served to measure association between factors. Logistic regression analysis was used to generate the OR, after checking the association between predictors and dependent variable. The difference between groups, for non-parametric data, was analyzed by Mann-Whitney test. Values of p less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant.
2.2. Ethical Considerations
The protocol was approved by the Ethical Committee of the Kinshasa University School of Public Health. Informed consent was obtained before inclusion of patients.
3. RESULTS
During the study period, 119 patients underwent abdominal and/or pelvic surgery. Four patients were excluded from analyses due to failure of perioperative description of adhesions (2 cases of peritonitis and 2 of ovarian cancers). Forty-eight patients (41.74%) were found to have abdominal and/or pelvic adhesions. In patients without PAS (n = 52), 13.46% had adhesions versus 65.08% in patients with PAS. In this latter group, the frequency of postoperative adhesions varied from 54.76% in “a unique PAS” group (n = 42) to 100% in “at least 3 PAS” group (n = 6) (Table 1).
The mean age (years ± SD) of patients was 32.69 ± 8.94 and the median parity (median; range) was 2; 1 - 3. There was no difference between groups of patients with and without adhesions in terms of age (p = 0.152), parity (p = 0.214), level of education (p = 0.565), economic level (p = 0.272) and the type of PAS; cesarean or not (p = 0.089) (Table 1). Whereas, the difference was significant between the two groups considering the history of PAS (p = 0.000) and the presence of SSA (p = 0.019). In patients who underwent a unique PAS, the CD represented 70.59% of surgeries performed. Considering the same group of patients but without CD, the appendectomy ranked first with 25% of cases.
Adhesions had a median age (median; range) of 3.72; 1.67 - 10.12 years. There were no severe adhesions. All others but two (95.8%) were mild. The median score of ASG (median; range) was 13.00; 6.00 - 22.50. In patients with history of a unique PAS (n = 42), the adhesions score did not differ (p = 0.85) when this surgery was
Table 1. Socioeconomic and medical history characteristics of patients.
SD: Standard deviation, PAS: Previous abdominal surgery, CD: Cesarean delivery, SSA: Skin scar anomaly.
*: Mann-Whitney test,
: computed for patients with a unique PAS (n = 42),
‡: computed for patients with PAS (n = 63).
cesarean delivery (CD) as compared to other procedures (data not shown). The uterus was the most concerned organ by adhesions (28.83%) followed by the bladder and the abdominal wall with respectively 23.31% and 21.47% (Table 2).
Associated factors to adhesions are gathered into Table 3. Adhesions were found 12 times more frequently in PAS group as compared to patients without history of PAS [OR: 11.98, CI95 (4.63 - 30.97)]. Furthermore, patients with at least 2 PAS were 5 times more likely to be found with adhesions than those with one PAS [OR: 4.96, CI95 (1.27 - 19.40)].
Table 2. Characteristics of adhesions.
N/A: not applicable, ASG: Adhesion Scoring Group,
*: computed only for postoperative adhesions (n = 41),
: almost all patients had more than one organ affected.
Table 3. Bivariate analysis of factors associated to adhesions.
PAS: Previous abdominal surgery, SSA: Skin scar anomaly, OR: Odds ratio, CI: Confidence interval,
*: computed for patients with a unique PAS (n = 42),
: computed only for patients with PAS,
‡: patients who had no information on having leiomyomas or not (n = 22), were excluded from analysis.
Comparing patients who underwent a unique PAS, the “non-cesarean” group presented less adhesions than “cesarean” group, but the difference was not significant [OR: 0.33, CI95 (0.088 - 1.21)].
When patients had SSA, they were 3 times more likely to have adhesions than other patients [OR: 2.79, CI95 (1.16 - 6.71)]. Patients who self-reported to have or to have had leiomyomas, had non-significantly 2 times more adhesions than other patients [OR: 2.39, CI95 (0.86 - 6.68)]. But, the difference between groups was statistically significant with obvious leiomyomas observed during surgery [OR: 2.49, CI95 (1.07 - 5.78)]. There were no difference in the distribution of PAS grouped as “CS” versus “non-CS” in patients with and without obvious leiomyomas during surgery (p = 0.646) (Table 4).
In a logistic regression analysis, the history of PAS and the presence of obvious leiomyomas during surgery were the only factors which remained associated significantly to adhesions with p = 0.000 and p = 0.037 respectively (Table 5).
4. DISCUSSION
Based on laparotomy and laparoscopy which are the gold standard methods for the diagnosis [6], the overall frequency of adhesions in the present study was 41.74%. When considering postoperative adhesions, our frequency of 65.08% turned close to 67% found by Weibel et al. [29], but lower than 93% by Menzies et al. [7]. In patients without PAS, we found 13.46% of adhesions, slightly higher than 10.4% reported by Menzies et al. [7] but lower than 28% by Weibel et al. [29] and 47% by Shokeir et al. [19]. The adhesions frequency of our series is close to 44.45% reported by Weibel et al. [29], working on 752 autopsies conducted in women and men, and to 43% found by Salim et al. [27], studying adhesions in relation to abdominal scar in repeat cesarean delivery.
Table 4. Patients with history of PAS grouped following the evidence of leiomyomas.
CS: Cesarean section.
Table 5. Determinants of adhesions.
PAS: Previous abdominal surgery, SSA: Skin scar anomaly, OR: Odds Ratio.
But it is somewhat higher than that of 35.5% found by Brill et al. [20] in women undergoing laparoscopy. Our postoperative frequency of adhesions falls in the range of 63% - 97% mostly reported in the literature [4,7]. The frequency of adhesions can vary according to many factors such as the type and the number of PAS, the type of incision, etc. In the present study the most frequent PAS were CD and appendectomy which are reported to result in fewer adhesions [30].
Previous abdominal surgery is thus considered the major risk factor, which raises need for cautious selection of patients, particular technique of avoidance of organs injuries and potential use of costly anti-adhesions barriers. Characteristics of adhesions from their incidence to their complications are much diversified involving several factors such as individual factors [13-15] and environmental factors [16-18]. A certain frequency of adhesions in patients without PAS implies the contribution of other factors than abdominal surgery. Among those factors, the high prevalence of sexually transmitted infections together with the implication of endometriosis should be addressed in our area. In fact, Shokeir et al. [19] reported this high prevalence in patients with endometriosis and inflammatory disorders, but in the present study these conditions have not been analyzed.
As characteristics of patients, the two groups with and without adhesions were identical in terms of age, parity, level of education, economic level and the type of PAS; cesarean or not. This means that these factors have influenced neither the frequency of adhesions in each group nor the risk factors analyzed in the present study.
There were no severe adhesions in patients according to the ASG grading. This reflects the predominance of CD and appendectomy as PAS in the present study. Indeed, it has been reported that adhesion development is less following CD and appendectomy compared to other procedures [29,31,32]. In their literature review, Awonuga et al. [30] highlight the proposed five hypotheses that can explain why CD results in fewer adhesions: less tissue hypoxia, less movement in the lower uterine segment, location of the incision on the lower segment covered by the bladder which is constantly being filled and emptied disrupting any fibrinous strands, less number of incisions, and rare hematoma within the low transverse incision.
The uterus and the bladder were the most associated organs to adhesions in the present study. These findings are different from those of many authors who reported these adhesions more likely to be associated with the omentum [7,20,27]. The difference noticed can be understood by the fact that, in our study, CD had been predominantly practiced as PAS than other procedures. Accordingly, this procedure leads mostly to pelvic adhesions involving organs in the anterior cul-de-sac [30].
There are several risk factors reported as related to adhesion formation [21] including age, height and weight that are subjects to divergent results [17,29]. The history of a PAS is the most studied factor in adhesion formation. As expected, we found that patients with PAS, irrespective of the type or the number of those PAS, were 12 times likely to have adhesions than patients without PAS. This is in agreement with many studies which reported a strong association between PAS and adhesion development [7,29,33,34]. But these findings differ from those reported by Shokeir et al. [19] working on infertile women who underwent laparoscopy for various procedures. Those authors did not notice any increased risk when they compared patients with and without PAS. The disparity can be explained by the fact that they worked on a selected group namely infertile women. In fact, many other factors apart from PAS, such as inflammatory diseases and endometriosis are mostly found to be involved in the occurrence of infertility.
As part of the surgical factor, adhesions were found 5 times more likely in patients with at least two PAS than in those with a unique PAS. Brill et al. [20], working on women undergoing laparoscopy and who had prior laparotomies, did not find difference between the two similar groups, as Salim et al. [27] did not, in their study on abdominal scar and adhesions in women undergoing cesarean delivery. However, our results are in accordance with that found by Luijendijk et al. [35] and with the established risk factors of adhesions reported in the literature [17,21,29], including the number of previous surgeries.
The similarity of the molecular environment between peritoneal adhesions, skin scar and leiomyomas has been studied in the literature [26] although conclusions are not definitive. In bivariate analyses, we found that a SSA and a perioperative establishment of leiomyomas were both statistically associated with adhesions apart from the history and the number of a PAS. But when integrated in a logistic model, only leiomyomas and a history of PAS persisted as determinants of adhesions risk. We also found that PAS were distributed equally in the groups with and without leiomyomas (p = 0.646). Accordingly, we cannot speculate that leiomyomas could have contributed to the need for operative delivery or to the myomectomy which could have caused more adhesions in this group. Some questions arise then about the accurate association between those three conditions which have to be investigated in further clinical researches. Salim et al. [27] studying the relation between surgical skin scar of a previous CD and peritoneal adhesions, established a correlation between a depressed abdominal scar and the severity of peritoneal adhesions. The results reported by Luo et al. [26] indicated that the molecular environment of leiomyomas may be more comparable to peritoneal adhesions than to keloids and incisional scars at least at the late stage of their wound healing. In addition, excess production and deposition of extracellular matrix in leiomyomas, keloids, skin scars and peritoneal adhesions has been demonstrated in many previous studies [26,36, 37]. Moreover, altered production of several proinflammatory and profibrotic cytokines has been reported in pathogenesis of these conditions and other fibrotic disorders [38,39].
This study is limited by the design and the relatively small size of the sample. Given those facts, subgroups could not be constituted adequately. Again, characteristics of patients according to the history of pelvic inflammatory disease or endometriosis and the perioperative diagnosis were not considered in the present study, which could allow analyses of other coexisting risk factors of adhesions.
In the other hand, we clinically showed the possible association between peritoneal adhesions, SSA and leiomyomas. Therefore, well designed studies have to be conducted to reinforce these results and to investigate the accurate clinical relation between those three conditions, in order to offer new assets in recognizing patients at high risk.
5. CONCLUSION
Abdominal and pelvic adhesions represent a frequent condition in our surgical practice. Although the history of previous laparotomy is the most important risk factor, there is a non-negligible amount of adhesions due to other risk factors. Leiomyomas and skin scar anomaly are other factors that may be considered to allow a cautious selection of high risk patients who must benefit from particular attention. This is to act on the prevention of adhesions occurrence and/or the avoidance of adhesions-related injuries during surgery.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors are deeply grateful to Professors TanduUmba, Tozin and Lokomba, all from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, for their scientific advice to the study.
NOTES