# Outcomes of Laparoscopic Hiatal Hernia Repair: A Three-Year Follow-Up Study From a UK Tertiary Centre

**Authors:** Muhammad U Khan, Amr Alnagar, Atiya Hameedulilah, Syed Osama Zohaib Ullah

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.94404 · Cureus · 2025-10-12

## TL;DR

This study examines the long-term outcomes of laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair, finding that most patients experience symptom relief, though radiological recurrence is common but often asymptomatic.

## Contribution

The study provides a three-year follow-up analysis of laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair outcomes, including symptom relief and recurrence rates.

## Key findings

- 81.7% of patients reported symptom relief at 36 months.
- 22.2% of patients had radiological recurrence at 36 months, but only 7.1% required redo surgery.
- Most radiological recurrences were asymptomatic, suggesting limited clinical relevance.

## Abstract

Background: Laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair is standard for symptomatic para-oesophageal and selected sliding hernias. International guidance supports elective repair for symptomatic disease; however, reported radiological recurrence rates vary, and their clinical relevance is debated.

Methodology: Retrospective cohort of 126 adults undergoing elective laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair at University Hospitals Birmingham (2016-2020). All patients underwent standard laparoscopic reduction, posterior cruroplasty and Nissen (360°) fundoplication. No mesh reinforcement was used in any case. Follow-up at 12 and 36 months captured overall symptom relief, dysphagia improvement, radiological recurrence, redo surgery, and symptomatic patients without radiological recurrence. Outcomes are intention-to-follow (N = 126) and reported as n (%) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).

Results: The median age was 59 years. At 12 months, 111/126 (88.1%) reported overall symptom relief, and 98/126 (77.8%) reported dysphagia improvement. At 36 months, 103/126 (81.7%) and 88/126 (69.8%), respectively. Radiological recurrence occurred in 15/126 (12.0%) at 12 months and 28/126 (22.2%) at 36 months. Symptomatic recurrence requiring redo surgery occurred in 2/126 patients (1.6%) at 12 months and 9/126 (7.1%) at 36 months; asymptomatic recurrences were 13/126 (10.3%) and 19/126 (15.1%), respectively. Symptomatic patients without radiological recurrence were 3/126 (2.4%) at 12 months and 4/126 (3.2%) at 36 months.

Conclusions: Laparoscopic repair provides a reliable symptom control outcome through three years. Radiological recurrence is relatively common but frequently asymptomatic; only a minority (≤10%) require redo surgery. Long-term, symptom-led follow-up is warranted.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** hiatal hernia (MONDO:0007721)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** dysphagia (MESH:D003680), Hiatal Hernia (MESH:D006551)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

10 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12604679/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12604679