These results have caused surgeons in his group to take a closer look at their own practices, Dr. Diez-Barroso said. “In our practice, now we’re considering closure of the ports in that location in the presence of known risk factors for hernia formation,” he said.
Dr. Diez-Barroso noted other scenarios when surgeons might consider closing 8-mm port sites, for example, after a prolonged operation, when significant torque has been placed on the port site, and in obese patients. The two cases of emergency surgery for port-site hernias involved obese patients: a female with a body mass index of 33 kg/m2 who had an abdominoperineal resection and a male with a BMI of 34 kg/m2 who had a right-sided ventral hernia repair.
The study had a number of limitations, Dr. Diez-Barroso said: its small sample size, retrospective nature, and short follow-up. “Moving forward, to understand better the true incidence of port-site hernias, we want further investigation with longer follow-up times and a larger sample size,” he said.
During questions, moderator Lesly Ann Dossett, MD, FACS, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, asked whether there were other steps surgeons could take, such as where to place the ports or how much torque they apply, besides closing the ports.