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Effect of a Pediatric Surgeon's Primarily Performed Technique on Inguinal Hernia Recurrence Rates: A Multicenter Retrospective Cohort Study

Video Published 2026-01-15 Updated 2026-05-10

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Topic Overview

Multicenter study of 207 surgeons found that pediatric surgeons primarily performing open inguinal hernia repairs had 3.6% recurrence rates when performing laparoscopic repairs versus 0.9% for their open cases. Surgeons primarily using laparoscopic technique showed equivalent outcomes (1.7%) for both approaches, suggesting proficiency in preferred technique drives outcomes.

Key Takeaways

  • Surgeons who primarily perform open repairs have higher recurrence rates (3.6% vs 1.7%) when they perform laparoscopic inguinal hernia repairs
  • Surgeons who primarily use laparoscopic technique achieve consistently low recurrence rates regardless of approach used
  • Technique proficiency matters more than technique type—surgeons get best outcomes with their most frequently performed method
  • Surgeons who split practice between open and laparoscopic repairs must actively maintain skills in both to ensure consistent outcomes
  • Multi-center data from 21 children's hospitals demonstrates that surgical volume and technique familiarity directly impact pediatric hernia recurrence

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