Background: Most microsurgeons believe that smoking and severity of injury adversely affect the outcome of digital replantation surgery. As countermeasures, several pharmacologic agents have been used for the perioperative period. The purpose of this retrospective study was to examine whether the rate of necrosis is appreciably different across smokers versus nonsmokers with prostaglandin E1 therapy.
Methods: The authors' study subjects included 144 patients (184 digits) who underwent replantation or revascularization between August of 2013 and August of 2015.The primary outcome was the incidence of total necrosis after replantation surgery, and the secondary outcomes were the rate of overall necrosis, proportion of total necrosis to overall necrosis, and total success. Intravenous administration of prostaglandin E1 was performed at the rate of 120 μg/day for 7 days after surgery in all patients. These outcomes of each injury type were compared between smoking and nonsmoking groups.
Results: Among the 184 injured digits, the incidence of total necrosis in smokers (23 percent) was higher than that in nonsmokers (17 percent), although no significant difference was shown (p = 0.36). The adjusted odds ratio was 1.17 (95 percent CI, 0.51 to 2.69). Similarly, there was no significant difference in the secondary outcomes between the two groups.
Conclusion: The authors' retrospective study found no significant difference in the formation or extent of necrosis after replantation or revascularization between smoking and nonsmoking groups when all patients were treated with prostaglandin E1.
Clinical question/level of evidence: Risk, II.