open access

Vol 94, No 7 (2023)
Research paper
Published online: 2023-05-30
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Placenta accreta spectrum surgery with the Joel Cohen incision for abdominal access: a single-center experience

Selim Buyukkurt1, Mete Sucu1, Irem Hatipoglu1, Ferda Ozlu2, Hakki Unlugenc3, Cuneyt Evruke1, Cansun Demir1
DOI: 10.5603/GP.a2023.0050
·
Pubmed: 37249265
·
Ginekol Pol 2023;94(7):532-538.
Affiliations
  1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Cukurova University Faculty of Medicine, Turkiye
  2. Department of Neonatology, Cukurova University Faculty of Medicine, Turkiye
  3. Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Cukurova University Faculty of Medicine, Turkiye

open access

Vol 94, No 7 (2023)
ORIGINAL PAPERS Obstetrics
Published online: 2023-05-30

Abstract

Objectives: Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) is usually treated by hysterectomy performed through a midline incision. We hypothesize that PAS surgery can be performed through a Joel-Cohen incision with adequate sight and safety.

Material and methods: The data on women having a hysterectomy due to PAS between 2013–2021 was collected retrospectively. Operation length, baby’s pre-delivery general anesthesia exposure time, transfusion rates, complication rates, postoperative admission to the intensive care unit (ICU), postoperative hospital stay, and neonatal outcomes were collected. In addition, the data investigated whether the operation was performed under emergent conditions and in the early (2013–2016) or late (2017–2021) years.

Results: 161 patients met the inclusion criteria. The median gestational age at delivery was 34 weeks (27–39). The mean operation length was 150 minutes (75–420), and the anesthesia–to–delivery interval was 32 minutes (5–95). Twenty-three (14%) patients did not receive any blood product, 73 (45%) received less than three packs of erythrocyte, and only seven (4%) had a massive transfusion. Bladder injuries occurred in 24 (15%). Preoperative anemia, hypogastric artery ligation, transfusion, ICU admission, and maternal and neonatal complications were more frequent in emergent cases. Comparison between the early and late groups showed a decrease in the rate of anemia, maternal ICU admission, hypogastric artery ligation, and neonatal complications. In addition, infectious complications were relatively rare in all groups.

Conclusions: The Joel-Cohen incision and bladder dissection before the baby’s delivery reduce transfusion rates and avoid midline incision, which is prone to complications and unpleasant cosmetic appearance while performing a hysterectomy for PAS surgery.

Abstract

Objectives: Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) is usually treated by hysterectomy performed through a midline incision. We hypothesize that PAS surgery can be performed through a Joel-Cohen incision with adequate sight and safety.

Material and methods: The data on women having a hysterectomy due to PAS between 2013–2021 was collected retrospectively. Operation length, baby’s pre-delivery general anesthesia exposure time, transfusion rates, complication rates, postoperative admission to the intensive care unit (ICU), postoperative hospital stay, and neonatal outcomes were collected. In addition, the data investigated whether the operation was performed under emergent conditions and in the early (2013–2016) or late (2017–2021) years.

Results: 161 patients met the inclusion criteria. The median gestational age at delivery was 34 weeks (27–39). The mean operation length was 150 minutes (75–420), and the anesthesia–to–delivery interval was 32 minutes (5–95). Twenty-three (14%) patients did not receive any blood product, 73 (45%) received less than three packs of erythrocyte, and only seven (4%) had a massive transfusion. Bladder injuries occurred in 24 (15%). Preoperative anemia, hypogastric artery ligation, transfusion, ICU admission, and maternal and neonatal complications were more frequent in emergent cases. Comparison between the early and late groups showed a decrease in the rate of anemia, maternal ICU admission, hypogastric artery ligation, and neonatal complications. In addition, infectious complications were relatively rare in all groups.

Conclusions: The Joel-Cohen incision and bladder dissection before the baby’s delivery reduce transfusion rates and avoid midline incision, which is prone to complications and unpleasant cosmetic appearance while performing a hysterectomy for PAS surgery.

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Keywords

cesarean section; hysterectomy; placenta accreta; postpartum hemorrhage

About this article
Title

Placenta accreta spectrum surgery with the Joel Cohen incision for abdominal access: a single-center experience

Journal

Ginekologia Polska

Issue

Vol 94, No 7 (2023)

Article type

Research paper

Pages

532-538

Published online

2023-05-30

Page views

1061

Article views/downloads

369

DOI

10.5603/GP.a2023.0050

Pubmed

37249265

Bibliographic record

Ginekol Pol 2023;94(7):532-538.

Keywords

cesarean section
hysterectomy
placenta accreta
postpartum hemorrhage

Authors

Selim Buyukkurt
Mete Sucu
Irem Hatipoglu
Ferda Ozlu
Hakki Unlugenc
Cuneyt Evruke
Cansun Demir

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