Background: Transanal irrigation (TAI) is employed for children with fecal incontinence, but it can present several problems which require a study of their outcomes among different patholo-gies and without a tailored work up. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an advanced protocol in order to tailor TAI, prevent complications, and evaluate outcomes. Methods: We included 70 patients (14 anorectal malformation, 12 Hirschsprung’s disease, 24 neurological impairment, 20 functional incontinence) submitted to a comprehensive protocol with Peristeen®: fecal score, volumetric enema, rectal ultrasound, anorectal 3D manometry, and diary for testing and parameter adjustment. Results: Among the patients, 62.9% needed adaptations to the parameters, mainly volume of irrigated water and number of puffs of balloon. These adaptations were positively correlated with pre-treatment manometric and enema data. In each group, the improvement of score was statistically significant in all cases (p 0.000); the main factor influencing the efficacy was the rate of sphincter anomalies. The ARM group had slower improvement than other groups, whereas functional patients had the best response. Conclusions: Our results showed that TAI should not be standardized for all patients, because each one has different peculiarities; evaluation of patients before TAI with rectal ultrasound, enema, and manometry allowed us to tailor the treatment, highlighting different outcomes among various pathologies, thus improving the efficacy.

Caruso A.M., Milazzo M.P.M., Bommarito D., Girgenti V., Amato G., Paviglianiti G., et al. (2021). Advanced management protocol of transanal irrigation in order to improve the outcome of pediatric patients with fecal incontinence. CHILDREN, 8(12), 1174 [10.3390/children8121174].

Advanced management protocol of transanal irrigation in order to improve the outcome of pediatric patients with fecal incontinence

Caruso A. M.
Primo
;
Bommarito D.;Girgenti V.;Amato G.;Paviglianiti G.;Casuccio A.;Catalano P.;Cimador M.;Di Pace M. R.
Ultimo
2021-11-11

Abstract

Background: Transanal irrigation (TAI) is employed for children with fecal incontinence, but it can present several problems which require a study of their outcomes among different patholo-gies and without a tailored work up. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an advanced protocol in order to tailor TAI, prevent complications, and evaluate outcomes. Methods: We included 70 patients (14 anorectal malformation, 12 Hirschsprung’s disease, 24 neurological impairment, 20 functional incontinence) submitted to a comprehensive protocol with Peristeen®: fecal score, volumetric enema, rectal ultrasound, anorectal 3D manometry, and diary for testing and parameter adjustment. Results: Among the patients, 62.9% needed adaptations to the parameters, mainly volume of irrigated water and number of puffs of balloon. These adaptations were positively correlated with pre-treatment manometric and enema data. In each group, the improvement of score was statistically significant in all cases (p 0.000); the main factor influencing the efficacy was the rate of sphincter anomalies. The ARM group had slower improvement than other groups, whereas functional patients had the best response. Conclusions: Our results showed that TAI should not be standardized for all patients, because each one has different peculiarities; evaluation of patients before TAI with rectal ultrasound, enema, and manometry allowed us to tailor the treatment, highlighting different outcomes among various pathologies, thus improving the efficacy.
11-nov-2021
Settore MED/20 - Chirurgia Pediatrica E Infantile
Caruso A.M., Milazzo M.P.M., Bommarito D., Girgenti V., Amato G., Paviglianiti G., et al. (2021). Advanced management protocol of transanal irrigation in order to improve the outcome of pediatric patients with fecal incontinence. CHILDREN, 8(12), 1174 [10.3390/children8121174].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
PERISTEEN CHILDREN 2021.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: ARTICOLO
Tipologia: Versione Editoriale
Dimensione 3.69 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
3.69 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10447/534436
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 3
  • Scopus 7
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 4
social impact