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Incidence and Factors Associated with Postoperative Delayed Hyponatremia after Transsphenoidal Pituitary Surgery: A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review
Author(s) -
ChengChi Lee,
YuChi Wang,
Yu-Tse Liu,
Yin-Cheng Huang,
PengWei Hsu,
KuoChen Wei,
KoTing Chen,
Ya-Jui Lin,
ChiCheng Chuang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.875
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1687-8345
pISSN - 1687-8337
DOI - 10.1155/2021/6659152
Subject(s) - medicine , hyponatremia , incidence (geometry) , odds ratio , transsphenoidal surgery , complication , meta analysis , confidence interval , pediatrics , surgery , pituitary adenoma , adenoma , physics , optics
Postoperative delayed hyponatremia is a complication associated with transsphenoidal pituitary surgery. Due to a wide spectrum of symptoms, the reported incidence and predictors of postoperative delayed hyponatremia vary among studies, and this deserves to be reviewed systematically.Methods PubMed, EMBASE, and CENTRAL databases were searched until September 1, 2020. Studies were included when (1) the event number of delayed hyponatremia after transsphenoidal pituitary surgery was reported, or (2) the associated factors of such complication were evaluated.Results A total of 27 studies were included for meta-analysis. The pooled incidence of overall and symptomatic delayed hyponatremia was 10.5% (95% confidence interval (CI) = 7.4–14.7%) and 5.0% (95% CI = 3.6–6.9%), respectively. No overt variations of the pooled estimates were observed upon subgroups stratified by endoscopic and microscopic procedure, publication year, and patients' age. In addition, 44.3% (95% CI = 29.6–60.2%) of unplanned hospital readmissions within 30 days were caused by delayed hyponatremia. Among the predictors evaluated, older age was the only significant factor associated with increased delayed hyponatremia (odds ratio = 1.16, 95% CI = 1.04–1.29, P  = 0.006).Conclusion This meta-analysis and systematic review evaluated the incidence of postoperative delayed hyponatremia and found it as a major cause of unplanned readmissions after transsphenoidal pituitary surgery. Older patients are more prone to such complications and should be carefully followed. The retrospective nature and heterogeneity among the included studies and the small number of studies used for risk factor evaluation might weaken the corresponding results. Future prospective clinical studies are required to compensate for these limitations.

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