Background: Although colonic surgery is performed with strict aseptic measures, some contamination is nearly impossible to avoid. In stapled anastomosis, the hole opened in the colon is minimum, just necessary for introducing the parts of the mechanical devices. In handsewn anastomosis, the colonic lumen is more exposed to the peritoneum, despite colonic occlusion with clamps while the suture is performed.
Patients and methods: A prospective, randomized study was performed between October 2009 and June 2011. Inclusion criteria were a diagnosis of right-sided colon cancer and having undergone an elective surgery with curative aims. The patients were divided into two groups: those patients undergoing a stapled ileocolonic anastomosis (group 1) and those undergoing a handsewn anastomosis (group 2). A microbiological sample was obtained from the peritoneal surface before opening the colon and after finishing the anastomosis in each group. Data were correlated with the wound infection and intra-abdominal infection rates.
Results: Eighty-four patients were included in the study: 42 patients in each group. There were two intra-abdominal abscesses (5 %) in each group (NS). Wound infection rate was 10 % in group 1 and 7 % in group 2 (NS). Mean operative time was 98.8 min in the stapled group and 105.2 min in the handsewn one (P = 0.013). Positive cultures were obtained in 79 % of the cases after stapled anastomosis and 73 % after handsewn ones (NS).
Conclusion: Peritoneal contamination appears in over 70 % of cases after ileocolonic anastomosis. Significant differences in peritoneal contamination, wound infection, and intra-abdominal abscess between stapled and handsewn anastomoses could not be demonstrated.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01458353.