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. 2022 Aug 26;6(4):zrac105. doi: 10.1093/bjsopen/zrac105

Comment on: Excision and suture in the midline versus Karydakis flap surgery for pilonidal sinus: randomized clinical trial

Marius Dettmer 1, Philipp Mörsdorf 2, Dietrich Doll 3,
PMCID: PMC9411542  PMID: 36008922

Dear Editor

Hemmingsson et al. can be congratulated for their research published recently in BJS Open1. While being a randomized clinical trial with a remarkable follow-up of 6–13 years, there are some other considerations, including why midline closure was used as a comparator group?

The fact that wound healing in Karydakis is faster than in midline closure is no surprise. Midline closure is known to have the highest infection and dehiscence rates2. Many national guidelines do not recommend midline closure, preferring the use of paramedian, asymmetric or flap closure. Larger meta-analyses report recurrence rates from midline closure as above 2 per cent per year of follow-up. The largest analysis of 83 000 patients reports equally poor results for midline closure3.

Although the results from this study are statistically sound, they are based on 125 operations on patients over a 10-year interval, in two hospitals performed by eight or more surgeons. This is a mean of 1.6 operations per surgeon per year during the study interval. Interestingly, there are nearly no recurrences after 6 years, and the midline recurrence rate is remarkably lower than that in previously published literature. Although follow-up was conducted properly, the reason for this remains unclear.

For future comparisons, small midline excisions may be performed in a paramedian or asymmetric fashion, which reduces recurrence rates. This has nothing to do with pressure or tension (BMI is irrelevant, as we know from the Minnessota study) or posture, but with midline piloerection of sharp hair fragments, as outlined by Bosche4 and underlined by the findings of Gosselink5. We agree that further pilonidal disease research is required but it is crucial to incorporate existing knowledge into future trial designs to maximize patient benefit.

Contributor Information

Marius Dettmer, Department of Trauma Surgery and Orthopaedics, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery and Burn Medicine, German Armed Forces Central Hospital Koblenz, Koblenz, Germany.

Philipp Mörsdorf, Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, Universitätsklinikum des Saarlandes, Homburg, Germany.

Dietrich Doll, Department of Procto-Surgery and Pilonidal Sinus, St. Marienhospital Vechta, Academic Teaching Hospital of the MHH Hannover, Vechta, Germany.

References

  • 1. Hemmingsson  O, Binnermark  F, Odensten  C, Rutegard  M, Franklin  KA, Haapamaki  MM. Excision and suture in the midline versus Karydakis flap surgery for pilonidal sinus: randomized clinical trial. BJS Open  2022;6:zrac007 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 2. Allen-Mersh  TG. Pilonidal sinus: finding the right track for treatment. Br J Surg  1990;77:123–132 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 3. Stauffer  VK, Luedi  MM, Kauf  P, Schmid  M, Diekmann  M, Wieferich  K  et al.  Common surgical procedures in pilonidal sinus disease: a meta-analysis, merged data analysis, and comprehensive study on recurrence. Sci Rep  2018;8:3058. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 4. Bosche  F, Luedi  MM, van der Zypen  D, Moersdorf  P, Krapohl  B, Doll  D. The hair in the sinus: sharp-ended rootless head hair fragments can be found in large amounts in pilonidal sinus nests. World J Surg  2018;42:567–573 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 5. Gosselink  MP, Jenkins  L, Toh  JWT, Cvejic  M, Kettle  E, Boadle  RA  et al.  Scanning electron microscope imaging of pilonidal disease. Tech Coloproctol  2017;21:905–906 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Articles from BJS Open are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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