Ambulatory inguinal hernia repair in Portugal - a multicenter prospective cohort study
Alice Pimentel, Alice Pimentel, Teresa Santos, Sofia Dias da Silva, Lúcia Carvalho, Ana Luísa Pinto Frutuoso, Rita Matias, Leonor Matos, Filipe Almeida, Fabiola Amado, Alexandra Ferreira, Isabel Martins, Estanislau Mateia, Vanessa Praxedes, Joana Seabra, Xavier de Sousa

TL;DR
This study in Portugal found no significant difference in complication rates between ambulatory and inpatient inguinal hernia repair, suggesting ambulatory surgery is safe for eligible patients.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on the safety of ambulatory inguinal hernia repair in a Portuguese population.
Findings
No significant difference in complication rates between ambulatory and inpatient surgery.
Ambulatory surgery was performed in 52.2% of patients without increased complication risk.
Abstract
Ambulatory surgery is the recommended approach for elective inguinal hernia repair for most people. However, the relative use of this procedure in Portugal and its related outcomes are unknown. We aimed to assess complication rates in patients undergoing ambulatory and inpatient surgery. Prospective multicentric cohort study included consecutive patients undergoing elective inguinal hernia repair in mainland Portugal (October–December 2019). The primary outcome was the post-operative complication rate (any Clavien–Dindo grade) among patients undergoing ambulatory and inpatient surgery. A logistic regression analysis was performed to adjust for patient and disease-related co-variables. Eight hundred twenty-eight patients (89.1% of males) were included from thirty-three hospitals, of which seven hundred sixteen (86.4%) had unilateral hernias. Four hundred thirty-three (52.2%) were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHernia repair and management · Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes · Appendicitis Diagnosis and Management
