Malpractice claims after antireflux surgery and paraesophageal hernia repair: a population-based analysis
Nelli M. J. Nurminen, Tommi K. M. Järvinen, Ville J. Kytö, Silja A. S. Salo, Caitlin E. Egan, Saana E. Andersson, Jari V. Räsänen, Ilkka K. P. Ilonen

TL;DR
This study analyzed malpractice claims after antireflux surgery and paraesophageal hernia repair in Finland, finding that paraesophageal hernia repair is linked to more serious complications.
Contribution
The study provides population-based data on malpractice claims for these surgeries, revealing trends and complication severity.
Findings
Paraesophageal hernia repair was associated with higher complication severity than antireflux surgery.
Claims related to paraesophageal hernia repair and redo surgery were overrepresented.
The rate of antireflux surgery decreased while paraesophageal hernia repair increased in Finland.
Abstract
The complication rate of modern antireflux surgery or paraesophageal hernia repair is unknown, and previous estimates have been extrapolated from institutional cohorts. A population-based retrospective cohort study of patient injury cases involving antireflux surgery and paraesophageal hernia repair from the Finnish National Patient Injury Centre (PIC) register between Jan 2010 and Dec 2020. Additionally, the baseline data of all the patients who underwent antireflux and paraesophageal hernia operations between Jan 2010 and Dec 2018 were collected from the Finnish national care register. During the study period, 5734 operations were performed, and the mean age of the patients was 54.9 ± 14.7 years, with 59.3% (n = 3402) being women. Out of all operations, 341 (5.9%) were revision antireflux or paraesophageal hernia repair procedures. Antireflux surgery was the primary operation for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEsophageal and GI Pathology · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Dysphagia Assessment and Management
