Introduction
This study aims to assess whether Prophylactic NGT insertion was associated with reduced rates of pneumonia, in comparison to Reactive NGT after colorectal surgery.
Methods
Pre-planned secondary analysis of a multicentre, prospective cohort study. Patients undergoing elective colorectal surgery between January and April 2018 were included. Those receiving NGT were divided into three groups, based on the timing of the placement: Routine (at the time of surgery); Prophylactic (after surgery, before vomiting); and Reactive (after surgery, after vomiting).
Pneumonia within 30 postoperative days was considered as primary outcome measure and it was compared between the three groups using multivariable regression analysis.
Results
4,715 patients were included in the analysis. 1,536 (32.6%) received an NGT corresponding to 926 (60.3%) Routine, 461 (30%) Reactive and 149 (9.7%) Prophylactic. 200 patients (4.2%) developed pneumonia (No NGT: 2.7%; Routine NGT: 5.2%; Reactive NGT: 10.6%; Prophylactic NGT: 11.4%). After adjustment for confounding factors, no significant difference in pneumonia rates was detected between the Prophylactic and Reactive NGT groups (OR: 1.03, 95% CI: 0.56 – 1.87, p = 0.932).
Conclusion
In patients who required NGT insertion after surgery, prophylactic insertion was not associated with fewer cases of pneumonia within 30 days of surgery in comparison to reactive insertion.