After screening 8516 studies on ventral hernia repair, only eight studies were found eligible for this systematic review on the surgical treatment of primary epigastric hernia. Most studies were excluded, because ventral hernia type was not specified, primary and incisional ventral hernias were mixed or only (para)umbilical hernias were included.
A total of four studies compared laparoscopic and open repair and five studies compared mesh reinforcement and suture repair. One study described both comparisons; hence, it is referred to in both sections [10]. The PRISMA flowchart of study selection is presented in Fig. 1.
Methodological quality and risk of bias
The summary and results of methodological quality assessment of the observational studies and RCT are shown in Fig. 2 and Table 1, respectively.
Table 1 Risk of bias for non-randomised studies Laparoscopic or open repair
Laparoscopic and open repair was compared in four studies [9,10,11,12]. Of these, three were retrospective cohort studies and one was a RCT, comprising a total of 2556 patients with epigastric hernias, 7819 patients with (para)umbilical hernias, and three patients with lateral hernias. None of the included studies exclusively reported on epigastric hernia. Baseline characteristics and outcome measures of the included studies are presented in Table 2.
Table 2 Study characteristics and outcome measures of studies comparing laparoscopic and open repair Early postoperative complications
Early postoperative complications were reported in all studies [9,10,11,12]. Due to the non-randomised character of data collection, Bisgaard et al. did not perform any statistical comparison between groups [10]. The RCT showed more early postoperative pain after open repair at 2 and 24 h (p = 0.001) [11]. The overall complication rate, addressed in two studies, showed higher overall complication rates after laparoscopic repair, although no significant differences were reported [10, 12].
No differences in surgical site infection and seroma were reported [11, 12]. Visceral injury was solely reported after laparoscopic repair (4% and 0.4%), although no significant difference was found [10, 12].
Late postoperative complications
No differences in hernia recurrences were reported after laparoscopic or open repair, although only one study reported a sufficient follow-up time with a median of 60 months in the open group and 56 months in the laparoscopic group [9, 11, 12]. Readmission rates, reported in two studies, were higher after laparoscopic repair [9, 10]. Helgstrand et al. found a significant difference (7.7% versus 4.4%, p < 0.001) in the univariate analysis; however, after adjusting for age, hernia size, recurrent or primary hernia, and umbilical or epigastric repair, no differences were found in readmission rate between laparoscopic and open repair [9]. Readmission was mainly due to postoperative pain and wound-related complications [9, 10].
Operative time and length of stay
Data on length of stay and operative time were inconclusive [9,10,11,12].
Mesh reinforcement or suture repair
A total of five retrospective studies compared open mesh reinforcement and open suture repair [10, 13,14,15,16]. Of these, one retrospective study had three treatment arms, including open onlay mesh, open intraperitoneal mesh and open suture repair [15]. Epigastric hernias were exclusively analysed in two retrospective studies, consisting of 919 patients [10, 14]. The remaining studies combined epigastric and (para)umbilical hernias [13, 15, 16]. Baseline characteristics and outcome measures of the included studies are presented in Table 3.
Table 3 Study characteristics and outcome measures of studies comparing mesh and suture repair Early postoperative complications
Early postoperative complications were reported in four studies [10, 13, 15, 16]. Low complication rates were observed and there were no differences in early postoperative complications after repair with mesh reinforcement or sutures.
Late postoperative complications
Recurrence rates were significantly lower after mesh reinforcement in two studies, although other studies found no difference [13,14,15,16]. Of these two studies, one study of 4786 patients with a mean follow-up of 21 months showed less reoperations for recurrences after mesh reinforcement compared to suture repair (2.2 versus 5.6%, p = 0.001) [13]. The second study of 98 patients with a follow-up of 53 months, which also included emergency repairs, showed a recurrence rate of 3.1% after mesh repair, which was significantly lower than the recurrence rate of 14.7% after suture repair (p = 0.0475) [16]. The occurrence of chronic pain did not differ between suture repair or repair with mesh reinforcement [14, 15]. Patients with recurrences reported significantly more pain [14, 15].
Operative time and length of stay
The mean operative time, reported in one study, was longer in mesh repair compared to suture repair (47 versus 29 min, p < 0.0001) [14]. No differences in length of stay were reported [16].