Journal article
Effect of Early vs Late Inguinal Hernia Repair on Serious Adverse Event Rates in Preterm Infants: A Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association, Vol.331(12), pp.1035-1044
03/26/2024
DOI: 10.1001/jama.2024.2302
PMCID: PMC10966421
PMID: 38530261
Abstract
Inguinal hernia repair in preterm infants is common and is associated with considerable morbidity. Whether the inguinal hernia should be repaired prior to or after discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit is controversial.
To evaluate the safety of early vs late surgical repair for preterm infants with an inguinal hernia.
A multicenter randomized clinical trial including preterm infants with inguinal hernia diagnosed during initial hospitalization was conducted between September 2013 and April 2021 at 39 US hospitals. Follow-up was completed on January 3, 2023.
In the early repair strategy, infants underwent inguinal hernia repair before neonatal intensive care unit discharge. In the late repair strategy, hernia repair was planned after discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit and when the infants were older than 55 weeks' postmenstrual age.
The primary outcome was occurrence of any prespecified serious adverse event during the 10-month observation period (determined by a blinded adjudication committee). The secondary outcomes included the total number of days in the hospital during the 10-month observation period.
Among the 338 randomized infants (172 in the early repair group and 166 in the late repair group), 320 underwent operative repair (86% were male; 2% were Asian, 30% were Black, 16% were Hispanic, 59% were White, and race and ethnicity were unknown in 9% and 4%, respectively; the mean gestational age at birth was 26.6 weeks [SD, 2.8 weeks]; the mean postnatal age at enrollment was 12 weeks [SD, 5 weeks]). Among 308 infants (91%) with complete data (159 in the early repair group and 149 in the late repair group), 44 (28%) in the early repair group vs 27 (18%) in the late repair group had at least 1 serious adverse event (risk difference, -7.9% [95% credible interval, -16.9% to 0%]; 97% bayesian posterior probability of benefit with late repair). The median number of days in the hospital during the 10-month observation period was 19.0 days (IQR, 9.8 to 35.0 days) in the early repair group vs 16.0 days (IQR, 7.0 to 38.0 days) in the late repair group (82% posterior probability of benefit with late repair). In the prespecified subgroup analyses, the probability that late repair reduced the number of infants with at least 1 serious adverse event was higher in infants with a gestational age younger than 28 weeks and in those with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (99% probability of benefit in each subgroup).
Among preterm infants with inguinal hernia, the late repair strategy resulted in fewer infants having at least 1 serious adverse event. These findings support delaying inguinal hernia repair until after initial discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01678638.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Effect of Early vs Late Inguinal Hernia Repair on Serious Adverse Event Rates in Preterm Infants: A Randomized Clinical Trial
- Creators
- HIP Trial InvestigatorsMartin L Blakely - Houston Institute for Clinical ResearchAndrea Krzyzaniak - Scripps Mercy HospitalMelvin S Dassinger - University of Arkansas for Medical SciencesClaudia Pedroza - Houston Institute for Clinical ResearchJorn-Hendrik Weitkamp - Vanderbilt University Medical CenterAnkush Gosain - University of Colorado Anschutz Medical CampusMichael Cotten - Duke UniversitySusan R Hintz - Stanford UniversityHenry Rice - Duke UniversitySherry E Courtney - University of Arkansas for Medical SciencesKevin P Lally - The University of Texas Health Science Center at HoustonNamasivayam Ambalavanan - University of Alabama at BirminghamCatherine M Bendel - University of MinnesotaKim Chi T Bui - Kaiser PermanenteCasey Calkins - Medical College of WisconsinNicole M Chandler - Johns Hopkins All Children's HospitalRoshni Dasgupta - Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical CenterJonathan M Davis - Tufts Medical CenterKatherine Deans - Department of Pediatric Surgery, Nemours Children's Hospital, Wilmington, DelawareDaniel A DeUgarte - University of California, Los AngelesJeffrey Gander - University of VirginiaCarl-Christian A Jackson - Brown UniversityMartin Keszler - Brown UniversityKaren Kling - Rady Children's Hospital-San DiegoStephen J Fenton - University of UtahKimberley A Fisher - Duke UniversityTyler Hartman - Dartmouth CollegeEunice Y Huang - Vanderbilt University Medical CenterSaleem Islam - University of FloridaFrances Koch - Medical University of South CarolinaShabnam Lainwala - Connecticut Children's Medical CenterAaron Lesher - Medical University of South CarolinaMonica Lopez - Vanderbilt University Medical CenterMeghna Misra - Elliot HospitalJamie Overbey - Naval Medical Center San DiegoBrenda Poindexter - Emory UniversityRobert Russell - University of Alabama at BirminghamSteven Stylianos - Morgan Stanley Children's HospitalDouglas Y Tamura - Children's Hospital Central CaliforniaBradley A Yoder - University of UtahDonald Lucas - Uniformed Services University of the Health SciencesDonald Shaul - Kaiser PermanenteP Ben Ham III - University at Buffalo, State University of New YorkColleen Fitzpatrick - Cohen Children's Medical CenterKara Calkins - University of California, Los AngelesAaron Garrison - Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical CenterDiomel de la Cruz - University of FloridaShahab Abdessalam - University of Nebraska Medical CenterCharlotte Kvasnovsky - University of ChicagoBradley J Segura - Fairview Health ServicesJoel Shilyansky - University of IowaLynne M Smith - Harbor–UCLA Medical CenterJon E Tyson - Houston Institute for Clinical Research
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association, Vol.331(12), pp.1035-1044
- DOI
- 10.1001/jama.2024.2302
- PMID
- 38530261
- PMCID
- PMC10966421
- NLM abbreviation
- JAMA
- eISSN
- 1538-3598
- Grant note
- U01 HD076733 / NICHD NIH HHS
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 03/26/2024
- Academic Unit
- Stead Family Department of Pediatrics; Surgery
- Record Identifier
- 9984577034802771
Metrics
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