# Anastomotic Leakage After Colorectal Surgery: Exploratory Analysis of Perioperative Risk Factors in a 672-Patient Cohort

**Authors:** Timur Buniatov, Cornelia Weidinger, Christian Krautz, Maximilian Brunner, Roland C E Francis, Robert Gruetzmann, Matthias Maak

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.103531 · Cureus · 2026-02-13

## TL;DR

This study analyzed 672 colorectal surgeries to identify risk factors for anastomotic leakage, finding that higher ASA class and longer operation times were independently linked to this complication.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the independent risk factors for anastomotic leakage, clarifying the role of perioperative variables in a large single-center cohort.

## Key findings

- Anastomotic leakage occurred in 3% of surgeries and was linked to significantly longer hospital stays.
- High ASA class (III/IV) and operative duration ≥300 minutes were independently associated with leakage.
- Intraoperative hypothermia and blood loss showed unadjusted but not independent associations with leakage.

## Abstract

Background

Anastomotic leakage (AL) is a serious complication of colorectal surgery, associated with re-intervention, prolonged hospitalization, and impaired long-term outcomes. Although patient- and procedure-related risk factors are well established, the impact of perioperative conditions, thermal management, fluid balance, intraoperative blood loss, and vasopressor-supported hemodynamics remains incompletely defined, with heterogeneous and confounded evidence.

Methods

In this retrospective single-center cohort study, 672 colorectal procedures with primary anastomosis at the University Hospital Erlangen (2013-2018) were analyzed. The primary endpoint was anastomotic leakage within 30 days, defined by clinical and/or radiologic evidence requiring intervention. Examined variables included age, sex, body mass index (BMI), ASA class, surgical urgency, operative duration, minimum intraoperative core temperature, estimated blood loss (>500 mL), total crystalloid volume (>3500 mL), and intraoperative norepinephrine administration. Associations with anastomotic leakage were evaluated using univariable and exploratory multivariable logistic regression.

Results

Anastomotic leakage (AL) occurred in 20/672 procedures (3.0%) and was associated with a markedly longer hospital stay (41.5 [IQR 31.3-60.3] vs. 11 [IQR 9.0-17.0] days; p < 0.001). In an exploratory multivariable logistic regression, ASA class III/IV (OR 3.8, 95% CI 1.3-11.3; p = 0.016) and operative duration ≥300 min (OR 3.6, 95% CI 1.2-13.6; p = 0.025) were independently associated with leakage. In contrast, intraoperative hypothermia (<35.5°C), estimated blood loss (>500 mL), and any norepinephrine use showed unadjusted associations with AL but were not independently associated after adjustment.

Conclusion

High ASA class (III/IV) and prolonged operative duration were the only independent risk factors for anastomotic leakage in this study. Intraoperative exposure variables such as hypothermia, estimated blood loss, and any norepinephrine use were not independently associated after adjustment.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** blood loss (MESH:D016063), hypothermia (MESH:D007035), Anastomotic Leakage (MESH:D057868)
- **Chemicals:** norepinephrine (MESH:D009638), ASA (MESH:D001241)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989156/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989156