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Controversies remain in treating inguinal hernias in children and the American Academy of Pediatrics is addressing them with a clinical report.

Faraz A. Khan, MD, an adjunct associate professor in the division of pediatric surgery at Loma Linda (Calif.) University Children’s Hospital, led the AAP’s Committee on Fetus and Newborn, sections on surgery and urology, in writing the guidance, published in Pediatrics.

Dr. Faraz Khan

An inguinal hernia, a common pediatric surgical condition (90% are in boys, the authors wrote), appears as a bulge in the groin or scrotum and requires surgical repair to prevent a more severe incarcerated hernia, which occurs when organs from the abdomen become trapped in the hernia.

The risk of that incarceration drives the preference and timing of surgical repair, the authors wrote.

The incidence of inguinal hernias is about 8-50 per 1,000 live births in term infants and is much higher in extremely low-birth-weight infants.

Ankush Gosain, MD, PhD, chief of pediatric surgery at Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, who was not involved in the AAP clinical report, said in an interview that the best timing for the surgery on a premature infant has been an unanswered question and this guidance is helpful.

Inguinal hernias in preterm infants are especially common. The incidence is reported to be as high as 20%.

Repair can wait until babies have left NICU

The authors concluded that there was moderate-quality evidence supporting deferring hernia repair until after discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit because this may reduce the risk of respiratory problems without increasing risk of incarceration or another operation.

But Dr. Gosain noted that the authors left the door open for data from a study that recently finished enrolling patients. That trial (Dr. Gosain is a site investigator) is expected to help determine whether an early- or late-term approach is best in preterm infants.

“There are pluses and minuses that we and the neonatologists and the anesthesiologists recognize,” he said.
 

Laparoscopic approach as good, sometimes better

Dr. Gosain also said he was glad to see the authors addressed the merits of the laparoscopic approach and when it is preferred.

The authors noted that a laparoscopic approach is increasingly popular – rates have grown fivefold between 2009 and 2018 – and they found it is “at least as effective as, if not better than,” the current preferred method, traditional open high ligation of the hernia sac.

Laparoscopy also appears to be a feasible option in managing recurrent hernias.

Dr. Gosain said that, when the laparoscopic approach was developed, there was concern that it would lead to higher recurrence of the hernias. “That concern has diminished over time,” he added. The paper helps give surgeons and pediatricians peace of mind that this is a safe approach.
 

Who should perform the surgeries?

The authors concluded that, ideally, pediatric surgical specialists, pediatric urologists, or general surgeons with a significant yearly case volume should perform the surgeries.

They found a significant inverse relationship between recurrence rates and general surgeon case volume: general surgeons who completed fewer than 10 pediatric inguinal hernias per year had the highest recurrence rates and the highest-volume general surgeons had recurrence rates similar to pediatric surgical specialists.

Pediatric surgical specialists trained in fellowships had the lowest rate of hernia recurrences.

Dr. Gosain said he was glad the authors pointed out that both the surgeon and the anesthesiologist ideally should have that specialty training.
 

No evidence that anesthetic exposure affects neurodevelopment

The researchers found no conclusive evidence that otherwise-healthy children’s exposure to a single relatively short duration of anesthetic adds any significant risk to neurodevelopment or academic performance, or increases risk of ADHD or autism spectrum disorder.

Contralateral exploration with unilateral hernia

Providers continue to debate contralateral exploration among patients with unilateral inguinal hernia. Proponents of exploration cite a 10%-15% rate of developing of a hernia at a later time. Therefore, routine exploration and, if identified, ligation of a patent processus vaginalis (PPV) may avoid a subsequent anesthetic.

Opponents counter that not all PPVs will become clinically significant inguinal hernias, and doing routine exploration exposes the patient to potentially unnecessary complications.

The authors wrote: “In the absence of strong data for or against repair of incidentally discovered contralateral PPV, family values related to the risks and benefits of each approach from a nuanced preoperative discussion should be considered.”

Dr. Gosain said that, with all of the guidance points, “you need to have a true conversation between the surgeon and the parents with pluses and minuses of the different approaches because one is not necessarily absolutely better than the other.”

The authors and Dr. Gosain declare no relevant financial relationships.

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Controversies remain in treating inguinal hernias in children and the American Academy of Pediatrics is addressing them with a clinical report.

Faraz A. Khan, MD, an adjunct associate professor in the division of pediatric surgery at Loma Linda (Calif.) University Children’s Hospital, led the AAP’s Committee on Fetus and Newborn, sections on surgery and urology, in writing the guidance, published in Pediatrics.

Dr. Faraz Khan

An inguinal hernia, a common pediatric surgical condition (90% are in boys, the authors wrote), appears as a bulge in the groin or scrotum and requires surgical repair to prevent a more severe incarcerated hernia, which occurs when organs from the abdomen become trapped in the hernia.

The risk of that incarceration drives the preference and timing of surgical repair, the authors wrote.

The incidence of inguinal hernias is about 8-50 per 1,000 live births in term infants and is much higher in extremely low-birth-weight infants.

Ankush Gosain, MD, PhD, chief of pediatric surgery at Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, who was not involved in the AAP clinical report, said in an interview that the best timing for the surgery on a premature infant has been an unanswered question and this guidance is helpful.

Inguinal hernias in preterm infants are especially common. The incidence is reported to be as high as 20%.

Repair can wait until babies have left NICU

The authors concluded that there was moderate-quality evidence supporting deferring hernia repair until after discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit because this may reduce the risk of respiratory problems without increasing risk of incarceration or another operation.

But Dr. Gosain noted that the authors left the door open for data from a study that recently finished enrolling patients. That trial (Dr. Gosain is a site investigator) is expected to help determine whether an early- or late-term approach is best in preterm infants.

“There are pluses and minuses that we and the neonatologists and the anesthesiologists recognize,” he said.
 

Laparoscopic approach as good, sometimes better

Dr. Gosain also said he was glad to see the authors addressed the merits of the laparoscopic approach and when it is preferred.

The authors noted that a laparoscopic approach is increasingly popular – rates have grown fivefold between 2009 and 2018 – and they found it is “at least as effective as, if not better than,” the current preferred method, traditional open high ligation of the hernia sac.

Laparoscopy also appears to be a feasible option in managing recurrent hernias.

Dr. Gosain said that, when the laparoscopic approach was developed, there was concern that it would lead to higher recurrence of the hernias. “That concern has diminished over time,” he added. The paper helps give surgeons and pediatricians peace of mind that this is a safe approach.
 

Who should perform the surgeries?

The authors concluded that, ideally, pediatric surgical specialists, pediatric urologists, or general surgeons with a significant yearly case volume should perform the surgeries.

They found a significant inverse relationship between recurrence rates and general surgeon case volume: general surgeons who completed fewer than 10 pediatric inguinal hernias per year had the highest recurrence rates and the highest-volume general surgeons had recurrence rates similar to pediatric surgical specialists.

Pediatric surgical specialists trained in fellowships had the lowest rate of hernia recurrences.

Dr. Gosain said he was glad the authors pointed out that both the surgeon and the anesthesiologist ideally should have that specialty training.
 

No evidence that anesthetic exposure affects neurodevelopment

The researchers found no conclusive evidence that otherwise-healthy children’s exposure to a single relatively short duration of anesthetic adds any significant risk to neurodevelopment or academic performance, or increases risk of ADHD or autism spectrum disorder.

Contralateral exploration with unilateral hernia

Providers continue to debate contralateral exploration among patients with unilateral inguinal hernia. Proponents of exploration cite a 10%-15% rate of developing of a hernia at a later time. Therefore, routine exploration and, if identified, ligation of a patent processus vaginalis (PPV) may avoid a subsequent anesthetic.

Opponents counter that not all PPVs will become clinically significant inguinal hernias, and doing routine exploration exposes the patient to potentially unnecessary complications.

The authors wrote: “In the absence of strong data for or against repair of incidentally discovered contralateral PPV, family values related to the risks and benefits of each approach from a nuanced preoperative discussion should be considered.”

Dr. Gosain said that, with all of the guidance points, “you need to have a true conversation between the surgeon and the parents with pluses and minuses of the different approaches because one is not necessarily absolutely better than the other.”

The authors and Dr. Gosain declare no relevant financial relationships.

Controversies remain in treating inguinal hernias in children and the American Academy of Pediatrics is addressing them with a clinical report.

Faraz A. Khan, MD, an adjunct associate professor in the division of pediatric surgery at Loma Linda (Calif.) University Children’s Hospital, led the AAP’s Committee on Fetus and Newborn, sections on surgery and urology, in writing the guidance, published in Pediatrics.

Dr. Faraz Khan

An inguinal hernia, a common pediatric surgical condition (90% are in boys, the authors wrote), appears as a bulge in the groin or scrotum and requires surgical repair to prevent a more severe incarcerated hernia, which occurs when organs from the abdomen become trapped in the hernia.

The risk of that incarceration drives the preference and timing of surgical repair, the authors wrote.

The incidence of inguinal hernias is about 8-50 per 1,000 live births in term infants and is much higher in extremely low-birth-weight infants.

Ankush Gosain, MD, PhD, chief of pediatric surgery at Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, who was not involved in the AAP clinical report, said in an interview that the best timing for the surgery on a premature infant has been an unanswered question and this guidance is helpful.

Inguinal hernias in preterm infants are especially common. The incidence is reported to be as high as 20%.

Repair can wait until babies have left NICU

The authors concluded that there was moderate-quality evidence supporting deferring hernia repair until after discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit because this may reduce the risk of respiratory problems without increasing risk of incarceration or another operation.

But Dr. Gosain noted that the authors left the door open for data from a study that recently finished enrolling patients. That trial (Dr. Gosain is a site investigator) is expected to help determine whether an early- or late-term approach is best in preterm infants.

“There are pluses and minuses that we and the neonatologists and the anesthesiologists recognize,” he said.
 

Laparoscopic approach as good, sometimes better

Dr. Gosain also said he was glad to see the authors addressed the merits of the laparoscopic approach and when it is preferred.

The authors noted that a laparoscopic approach is increasingly popular – rates have grown fivefold between 2009 and 2018 – and they found it is “at least as effective as, if not better than,” the current preferred method, traditional open high ligation of the hernia sac.

Laparoscopy also appears to be a feasible option in managing recurrent hernias.

Dr. Gosain said that, when the laparoscopic approach was developed, there was concern that it would lead to higher recurrence of the hernias. “That concern has diminished over time,” he added. The paper helps give surgeons and pediatricians peace of mind that this is a safe approach.
 

Who should perform the surgeries?

The authors concluded that, ideally, pediatric surgical specialists, pediatric urologists, or general surgeons with a significant yearly case volume should perform the surgeries.

They found a significant inverse relationship between recurrence rates and general surgeon case volume: general surgeons who completed fewer than 10 pediatric inguinal hernias per year had the highest recurrence rates and the highest-volume general surgeons had recurrence rates similar to pediatric surgical specialists.

Pediatric surgical specialists trained in fellowships had the lowest rate of hernia recurrences.

Dr. Gosain said he was glad the authors pointed out that both the surgeon and the anesthesiologist ideally should have that specialty training.
 

No evidence that anesthetic exposure affects neurodevelopment

The researchers found no conclusive evidence that otherwise-healthy children’s exposure to a single relatively short duration of anesthetic adds any significant risk to neurodevelopment or academic performance, or increases risk of ADHD or autism spectrum disorder.

Contralateral exploration with unilateral hernia

Providers continue to debate contralateral exploration among patients with unilateral inguinal hernia. Proponents of exploration cite a 10%-15% rate of developing of a hernia at a later time. Therefore, routine exploration and, if identified, ligation of a patent processus vaginalis (PPV) may avoid a subsequent anesthetic.

Opponents counter that not all PPVs will become clinically significant inguinal hernias, and doing routine exploration exposes the patient to potentially unnecessary complications.

The authors wrote: “In the absence of strong data for or against repair of incidentally discovered contralateral PPV, family values related to the risks and benefits of each approach from a nuanced preoperative discussion should be considered.”

Dr. Gosain said that, with all of the guidance points, “you need to have a true conversation between the surgeon and the parents with pluses and minuses of the different approaches because one is not necessarily absolutely better than the other.”

The authors and Dr. Gosain declare no relevant financial relationships.

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