# Long-Term Outcomes After Epigastric Hernia Repair in Women—A Nationwide Database Study

**Authors:** M. W. Christoffersen, N. A. Henriksen

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/jaws.2023.11626 · 2023-09-25

## TL;DR

This study analyzed long-term outcomes of epigastric hernia repair in women and found that mesh repairs reduced recurrence but increased wound complications.

## Contribution

The study provides nationwide data on long-term outcomes of different epigastric hernia repair techniques in women.

## Key findings

- Open mesh repair had the lowest recurrence rate compared to sutured and laparoscopic repairs.
- Open mesh repair was associated with a slightly higher risk of wound complications.
- Over half of the women received suture-based repairs despite higher recurrence rates.

## Abstract

Aim: Women have the highest prevalence of epigastric hernia repair. Outcomes after epigastric hernia repair are rarely reported independently, although pathology and surgical techniques may be different than for other primary ventral hernias. The aim of this study was to evaluate long-term outcomes after epigastric hernia repairs in women on a nationwide basis.

Methods: Nationwide cohort study from the Danish Hernia Database. Complete data from women undergoing elective epigastric hernia repair during a 12 years period (2007–2018) was extracted. A 100% follow-up was obtained by combining data from the National Civil Register. The primary outcome was operation for recurrence, secondary outcomes were readmission and operation for complications. Outcomes for open sutured repair, open mesh repair mesh, and laparoscopic repairs were compared.

Results: In total, 3,031 women underwent elective epigastric hernia repair during the study period. Some 1,671 (55.1%) women underwent open sutured repair, 796 (26.3%) underwent open mesh repair, and 564 (18.6%) underwent laparoscopic repair. Follow-up was median 4.8 years. Operation for recurrence was higher after sutured repairs than after open mesh and laparoscopic repairs (7.7% vs. 3.3%, vs. 6.2%, p < 0.001). The risk of operation for complications was slightly higher after open mesh repair compared with sutured repair and laparoscopic repair (2.6% vs. 1.2%, vs. 2.0%, p = 0.032), with more operations for wound complications in the open mesh group (2.0%, p = 0.006).

Conclusion: More than half of the women underwent a suture-based repair, although mesh repair reduces risk of recurrence. Open mesh repair had the lowest risk of recurrence, but on the expense of slightly increased risk of wound-related complications.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ventral hernias (MESH:D006555), Epigastric Hernia (MESH:D006547), wound complications (MESH:D014947)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10831641/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10831641