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Canadian Journal of Surgery logoLink to Canadian Journal of Surgery
. 1997 Feb;40(1):14–17.

Comparison of hemorrhoidal treatments: a meta-analysis

Helen M MacRae *, Robin S McLeod
PMCID: PMC3949873  PMID: 9030078

Abstract

Objective

To determine whether any method of hemorrhoid therapy has been shown to be superior in randomized trials.

Method

A meta-analysis of all randomized controlled trials assessing two or more treatment modalities for symptomatic hemorrhoids.

Main Outcome Measures

Response to therapy, the need for further therapy, complications and pain.

Results

Eighteen trials were available for analysis. Hemorrhoidectomy was found to be significantly more effective than manual dilatation of the anus (p = 0.0017) and associated with less need for further therapy (p = 0.034), no significant difference in complications (p = 0.60) but more pain (p < 0.001). Patients who underwent hemorrhoidectomy had a better response to treatment than did patients who were treated with rubber-band ligation (p = 0.001), although complications were greater (p = 0.02), as was pain (p < 0.0001). Rubber-band ligation was better than sclerotherapy in response to treatment for all hemorrhoids (p = 0.005) and for hemorrhoids stratified by grade (grades 1 and 2, p = 0.007, grade 3, p = 0.042), with no difference in the complication rate (p = 0.35). Patients treated with sclerotherapy (p = 0.031) or infrared coagulation (p = 0.0014) were more likely to require further therapy than those treated with rubber-band ligation, although pain was greater after rubber-band ligation (p = 0.03 for sclerotherapy, p < 0.0001 for infrared coagulation).

Conclusions

Rubber-band ligation is recommended as the initial mode of therapy for grades 1 to 3 hemorrhoids. Although hemorrhoidectomy showed better response, it is associated with more complications and pain than rubber-band ligation. Thus, it should be reserved for patients whose hemorrhoids fail to respond to rubber-band ligation.

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