Mesh Removal: How Much Does Surgical Approach Matter?


Does surgical approach have a role in inguinal hernia mesh removal? At the 2021 annual meeting of the Americas Hernia Society (abstract 50176), researchers of a new study sought to answer this question.

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The study led by Desmond Huynh, MD, a PGY-4 general surgery resident at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, in Los Angeles, included 113 patients, 39 of whom had open, 23 of whom had laparoscopic and 51 of whom had robotic mesh removal. The approach was based on initial mesh placement. Mesh that was placed anteriorly in an open fashion was removed via the open technique, and preperitoneal mesh was removed either laparoscopically or robotically.

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Patients were evaluated two weeks after removal, and long-term follow-up occurred at a mean of 2.5 years. The patients in the three cohorts were well balanced in terms of comorbidities and indications for mesh removal, which included foreign-body sensation, meshoma, reaction, neuralgia and infection.

Table. Operative Complications
OpenLaparoscopicRoboticP Value
Intraoperative injury4 (10%)8 (39%)8 (16%)0.044
Minor vascular (inferior epigastric, gonadal)4 (10%)4 (17%)7 (14%)NS
Major vascular (external iliac)0 (0%)3 (13%)1 (2%)0.019
Nerve01 (4.3%)0NS
Organ000NS
NS, nonsignificant

The operative time was longest with the robotic approach (226 minutes), followed by open (181 minutes) and laparoscopic procedures (169 minutes). There was a significantly different rate of intraoperative injury and major vascular injury among the three approaches, with the laparoscopic group having the highest rate of injury (Table). The mean blood loss was 77 mL in open, 96 mL in laparoscopic and 52 mL in robotic procedures, with significant variance. There was no difference in postoperative complications among approaches. There was no difference in pain scores among groups at two-week and long-term follow-up with a mean of 2.5 years. There was a significant improvement in pain scores in all patients after mesh removal. There was no difference in pain score improvement among the approaches.

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The authors concluded that all mesh removal approaches were effective in treating chronic postoperative inguinal pain after inguinal hernia repair. The three groups were equally affected by treating postoperative chronic inguinal pain, yielding durable improvement. There was significant variance among the groups with regard to operative time, rate of injury and blood loss, with post hoc analysis suggesting that a robotic approach may confer some advantage, Dr. Huynh said. However, these observed differences were small.

“Based on [what the authors say], open repair is always going to be the procedure of choice for meshes that were placed anteriorly. In these cases, open removal was as good as robotic,” said Kamal Itani, MD, the chief of surgery at VA Boston Health Care System, a professor of surgery at Boston University and a faculty member at Harvard Medical School, who was not involved with the study. “It then becomes a comparison between the laparoscopic and robotic approach for posteriorly placed meshes. Although the surgery was longer with the robot, there were less complications with the robotic approach compared to laparoscopic. The numbers are too small, and possible confounders too many to reach solid conclusions. However, [this study] could be hypothesis-generating for a larger prospective multicenter study looking at laparoscopic versus robotic explantation of meshes in patients that had posteriorly placed mesh.”

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Dr. Huynh noted that mesh removal is safe and effective for treating chronic postoperative inguinal pain in the right patients, regardless of the approach taken. “Due to the reoperative setting and distorted anatomy, these cases should be approached judiciously by surgeons who are practiced in it,” Dr. Huynh said. “Based on our group’s own experience and trends in this data set, we prefer a robotic approach when appropriate. However, we continue to regularly employ the open and laparoscopic techniques when necessary.”

European Surgeons Vote on Global Recommendations for Inguinal Hernia


A Mix of Consensus And Controversy on Recommendations
Rotterdam, Netherlands—Let the voting begin. The bustling auditorium at the 2016 International Congress of the European Hernia Society (EHS) quieted as more than 200 surgeons logged onto the EHS website to cast their votes on 50 global statements and recommendations for managing groin hernias.

Although surgical societies including the EHS have created guidelines for inguinal hernia surgery in the past, this marks the first attempt at world guidelines.

“The main goal of these guidelines is to improve patient outcomes and standardize care worldwide,” Maarten Simons, MD, general surgeon in the Department of Surgery at Onze Lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis Hospital, in Amsterdam, told the audience at the “Consensus Meeting” session.

Existing guidelines, which often reflect the values and practices of a particular region, have not yet achieved this goal. The current body of literature on inguinal hernia repair still shows wide variations in surgical practice and patient outcomes, with estimates for recurrence and chronic pain as high as 15%, depending on the analysis, surgeon and institution.

“We ideally want recurrences below 5% and chronic pain below 1%,” Dr. Simons said. “But that’s difficult to achieve with so many different meshes and prosthetic devices, and the variability in the way they are used.”

In 2014, a group of 50 experts from seven hernia societies worldwide joined forces and established the HerniaSurge Group to create a set of recommendations for all hernia surgeons based on the best available evidence.

“This was a herculean effort by many people,” said Robert J. Fitzgibbons, MD, the Harry E. Stuckenhoff Professor and Chairman of Surgery at Creighton University School of Medicine, in Omaha, Neb., who helped draft the guidelines.

Over six months, these surgeons divided themselves into groups dedicated to subtopics ranging from technique and mesh preferences, to anesthesia and prophylactic antibiotic practices, to education and training requirements. After combing through more than 3,500 articles, the international cohort ultimately whittled down the evidence to 50 essential statements and recommendations, which were subsequently graded by level of evidence (very low, low, moderate or high) and recommendation strength (weak or strong).

At the 2016 EHS congress, members of the HerniaSurge Group unveiled a draft of the guidelines for the first time. The purpose of the session was to engage a larger community of surgeons in the process and to vote on each guideline.

“Today is all about the consensus,” Dr. Simons said.

Marc Miserez, MD, PhD, a general surgeon at University Hospital Gasthuisberg in Leuven, Belgium, approached the microphone to begin reading the guidelines. Dr. Miserez indicated that a consensus would be reached if 70% or more voters agreed with the recommendation as well as its strength and level of evidence.
The first guideline—“Clinical examination alone is recommended for confirming the diagnosis of an evident groin hernia”—passed that threshold with 80% of voters agreeing on the recommendation, the strength as “strong” and the level of evidence as “low.”
A handful of other recommendations achieved a strong consensus:

92% agreed, recommendation strong, evidence low: “In patients with primary bilateral hernias a laparo-endoscopic approach is recommended provided expertise is available.”
91% agreed, recommendation strong, evidence high: “Although most patients will develop symptoms and need surgery, watchful waiting for minimal or asymptomatic inguinal hernias is safe since the risk of hernia complications is low and can be recommended.”
83% agreed, recommendation strong, evidence moderate: “A mesh-based repair technique is recommended for patients with symptomatic inguinal hernias.”
83% agreed, recommendation strong, evidence low: “Nerve anatomy awareness and recognition during surgery is recommended to reduce the incidence of chronic post-herniorrhaphy pain.”
81% agreed, recommendation strong, evidence moderate: “In laparo-endoscopic inguinal hernia repair, TAPP [transabdominal preperitoneal] and TEP [total extraperitoneal] have comparable outcomes; hence it is recommended that the choice of the technique should be based on the surgeon’s skills, education and experience.”
79% agreed, recommendation strong, evidence low: “Hernia surgeons should be aware of the clinical characteristics of the meshes they use.”
74% agreed, strong, very low: “It is recommended that surgeons tailor treatments based on expertise, local/national resources, and patient- and hernia-related factors.”
But several recommendations proved more controversial. About 22% of the audience disagreed that a laparoscopic technique should be recommended in male patients with a primary unilateral inguinal hernia; 26% of voters did not concur that day-case laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair with minimal use of disposables is cost-effective; and more than 36% disagreed that general or local anesthesia is preferred over regional in patients 65 years of age and older.

After the voting ended, the panel circled back to address these more divisive recommendations. One surgeon in the audience, for instance, noted that day-case surgery may not be a financially attractive option in certain hospitals due to local insurance practices. Another surgeon explained that, in Sweden, universities teach the Lichtenstein approach, and, thus, the recommendation to use a laparoscopic technique may not be feasible in that environment.

Even the watchful waiting recommendation, with its 91% consensus and high level of evidence, may not apply universally. Neil Smart, MD, a consultant colorectal surgeon at the Royal Devon and Exeter Foundation NHS Trust, in Exeter, England, noted that in the United Kingdom, policymakers have directed general practitioners to practice watchful waiting in an effort to cut costs. But this strategy has backfired. Dr. Smart has seen patients, who were initially rejected for a surgical consult, receive approval only after the situation had become dire and required emergency surgery.

“The cost of one late inguinal hernia surgery, including hospital stay and complications, could have paid for many repairs if we’d operated sooner,” said Dr. Smart, who also is honorary senior lecturer at the University of Exeter Medical School. “Just because there are guidelines, doesn’t mean they are right or appropriate for everyone.”

Guy Voeller, MD, professor of surgery at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, in Memphis, questioned the value of world guidelines as well. “I understand why we need to have some common ground in hernia surgery, but I think hernia guidelines are a mistake,” Dr. Voeller said. “There is no algorithmic approach to medicine.”

According to Dr. Simons, between 15% and 30% of surgeons will choose not to follow guidelines because the recommendations do not apply to their daily practice or conflict with their professional autonomy and judgment.

Dr. Fitzgibbons also expects that not all recommendations will be universally accepted. Take the recommendation that mesh repair is superior to tissue repair. “In expert centers, like the Shouldice Hospital [in Thornhill, Ontario], surgeons achieve as good results with tissue repair,” Dr. Fitzgibbons said. “That is why I suggested qualifying this recommendation to ‘in the average general surgeons’ hands.’”

Although the HerniaSurge Group tried to consider the feasibility and usefulness of each recommendation for different countries, it was impossible to account for every political nuance or cultural variation. “As such, it is important to understand that these are just guidelines based on the strongest evidence to date and cannot be considered rules,” Dr. Fitzgibbons said.

Alfredo Carbonell, DO, professor of surgery at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville, and co-director of the Hernia Center at the Greenville Health System, sees the value in guidelines as a reference for clinical practice but believes the recommendations may not be widely adopted in the United States. “I think guidelines are generally useful for informing clinical practice, particularly for hernia surgery where many questions remain unanswered,” Dr. Carbonell said. Young surgeons especially may be looking for advice on best practices. “But surgeons in the U.S. tend to do what they’re going to do, and may not necessarily wait for guidelines to adopt a new technique.”

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Both Drs. Carbonell and Voeller expressed concern that the guidelines may create issues from a legal standpoint. “Guidelines can give lawyers ammunition and be a way for payors and administrators to police how we practice medicine,” Dr. Voeller said. “Attorneys love to whip out guidelines and treat them as law, but rarely understand that guidelines only inform, not dictate, practice.”

Dr. Fitzgibbons clarified that the world guidelines are not designed for government agencies, insurance companies or other regulatory bodies. “In the final version, we will put a disclaimer to reiterate that these guidelines are for surgeons, not third parties,” he said.

Still, even when it’s published, this set of guidelines will not represent the last word on inguinal hernia repair. “It is important to recognize that these guidelines will be continually updated as new data emerges,” Dr. Fitzgibbons said.

Given that surgical practices, health policies and regional resources vary significantly from location to location, the question remains: Will surgical practice actually improve with world guidelines?

“Some surgeons say yes; some say no,” Dr. Simons said. “I can’t say for certain because we don’t have evidence to confirm either way.”

In the future, the HerniaSurge Group will continue to seek consensus on the 50 key statements and recommendations from surgeons in other countries and incorporate feedback from surgeons in different specialties. The group will aim to publish the final version in 2017.