Effect of a Pediatric Surgeon's Primarily Performed Technique on Inguinal Hernia Recurrence Rates: A Multicenter Retrospective Cohort Study
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- 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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Does a surgeon's preferred technique actually affect hernia outcome? This study suggests that yes, it can. I'm Lizzie Lee from Cincinnati Children's, and this is an article you should know about. Researchers looked at pediatric inguinal hernia repairs across 21 children's hospitals. Here's the key finding. When surgeons who mostly do open repairs performed a laparoscopic repair, the hernia came back more often, 3.6% compared to 1.7% when laparoscopy was done by surgeons who use that approach. On the flip side, surgeons who primarily do laparoscopic repairs had similar low recurrence rates, whether they operated laparoscopically or open. This means that surgeons tend to get the best results with the technique they use most often. If surgeons split their practice between open and laparoscopic hernia repairs, it's important to maintain strong skills in both, so that outcomes can stay consistent for kids. Let us know what you think in the comments below and stay tuned for more articles that you should know about.