Among patients with CD, 90% undergo surgery during disease progression, and 50% require a second operation. Thus, surgery remains a major treatment modality for CD.3 There is currently a lack of domestic and international multicenter clinical studies reporting on the development of enterocutaneous fistula following CD surgery with predictive models. Some single-center studies from China have reported the incidence of postoperative complications of CD to be 5.92–32.3%, among which the incidence of enterocutaneous fistula accounted for 8.3–58.6% of the total complication rate.4 Previous international studies have reported the incidence of postoperative complications of CD to be 5.0–40.9%, with the incidence of enterocutaneous fistula accounting for 6.0–76.4% of the total complication rate.5, 6 Postoperative intestinal fistula can cause changes such as abdominal infection, malnutrition, and multi-organ failure. Given the severity of this complication, the prevention of postoperative intestinal fistula in patients with CD warrants attention. The findings of previous domestic and international studies indicate that emergency surgery, type of anastomosis, disease activity, increased hematocrit, preoperative anemia, preoperative malnutrition, decreased preoperative body mass, preoperative azathioprine treatment, preoperative steroid treatment, preoperative anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α treatment, and perforation lesions were considered factors influencing the development of various complications after surgery in patients with CD. However, the results of various independent studies have not been consistent.7–9 Thus, the present study combined data from three inflammatory bowel disease centers in China to investigate the factors influencing the development of postoperative intestinal fistula in patients with CD and to develop a predictive model.
Various single serological indicators have low specificity and large errors in evaluating postoperative complications in patients with CD. In light of this, the present study aimed to evaluate disease activity and the development of postoperative complications in CD by establishing composite serologic indexes. By collecting clinical data and serological indicators of patients with CD from three large tertiary hospitals, it was found that NLR, PLR, CAR, SII, and PNI were all factors influencing the development of postoperative intestinal fistula. High NLR and low PNI were risk factors for postoperative intestinal fistula; the higher the NLR, the greater the risk of postoperative intestinal fistula, and the higher the PNI, the lower the risk of postoperative intestinal fistula. NLR and PLR can be determined easily from complete blood count and have been confirmed as biomarkers of inflammation and to be important in disease prognosis. Several studies have reported their correlation with the prognosis of inflammatory diseases such as acute/chronic pancreatitis; hepatitis; cancers of the gastrointestinal tract, liver, and pancreas; as well as cardiovascular disease, and it has also been used to assess CD activity.10 Inflammation and cancer have been suggested to cause tissue necrosis, which can elevate NLR and increase inflammatory mediators in the body, thereby triggering inflammatory cascades.11 Lymphocytes are major inflammatory cells of the immune system that can kill pathogenic microorganisms when inflammation is present but are also accompanied by the depletion of lymphocytes, so NLR can be used as an indicator of inflammation in determining the prognosis of patients with inflammatory diseases. PNI is an indicator that responds to both the nutritional and immune status of the body, and it is often used for determining the prognosis and severity of disease in patients with chronic diseases.12 A study showed that lower preoperative PNI levels were a marker of disease activity in patients with CD.13 Clinicians should be aware of the perioperative management of CD patients with low PNI. Therefore, the management of antibiotics and enteral and parenteral nutrition is particularly important. Moreover, it is important to optimize the implementation of prevention strategies at early stages before the operation to reduce the development of postoperative enterocutaneous fistula in patients with CD.
The results of the present study showed that the CDAI score is a factor influencing the development of postoperative enterocutaneous fistula in patients with CD. Multivariate logistic regression analysis suggested that higher disease activity resulted in a higher risk of postoperative intestinal fistula. The CDAI score can be used for assessing current disease activity in patients with CD, as well as for dynamic monitoring of changes in disease activity after CD treatment. It can also indicate the recurrence of symptoms after surgery, making it a benchmark for measuring disease severity, clinical response, and remission rates. A study showed a higher incidence of postoperative infectious complications in patients with active CD than that in patients in remission.14
The present study suggested that disease behavior influences the development of postoperative intestinal fistula in patients with CD. Multivariate logistic regression analysis suggested that the risk was significantly higher in patients with stricturing CD than in patients with non-stricturing and non-perforating CD. Perforating CD was not an independent risk factor for the development of postoperative intestinal fistula. Wang et al. included 142 Chinese patients with CD and suggested that patients with perforating CD are more likely to develop recurrence after surgery.15 Perforation lesions in the intestinal wall can involve adjacent organs and tissues, forming enterovesical or rectovaginal fistulas and leading to abdominal abscesses. In the present study, we found that patients with stricturing CD are more likely to develop intestinal fistulas than patients with perforating CD. This may be due to the combination of mucosal inflammation, the release of associated molecular mediators, and increased growth factor levels that promote the recruitment and proliferation of smooth muscle cells, stellate cells, and myofibroblasts in patients with CD, leading to intestinal fibrosis. In addition, intestinal stricture due to CD differs from intestinal obstruction due to other diseases, and anti-inflammatory therapy alone or small bowel endoscopic strictureplasty may not be an effective treatment. Moreover, stricture may occur in other parts of the bowel segment as the disease progresses, even after surgical removal of the strictured bowel segment.
There is a lack of domestic and international predictive models related to the development of postoperative intestinal fistula in patients with CD. Therefore, it is important to construct practical risk models with high predictive value to help stratify at-risk patients. Based on this predictive model, clinicians can identify patients at higher risk of developing enterocutaneous fistula after surgery at an early stage, which is also significant for earlier recovery after surgery. Studies have shown that nomograms have high accuracy and ease of application in predicting disease occurrence.16 The nomogram defines a score for each independent variable based on the magnitude of the regression coefficients of all independent variables. The scores of all independent variables are then added to yield a total score, which is used to calculate the probability of postoperative intestinal fistula for each patient. In the present study, four independent factors were identified based on multifactorial logistic regression analysis, namely disease behavior (B2), NLR, PNI, and CDAI scores. These were integrated into a nomogram model for predicting the development of postoperative intestinal fistula, with a C-index of 0.899 (95% CI: 0.830–0.968, p < 0.001) obtained after evaluation of the validation set. Finally, similar results were obtained in the Hosmer–Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test, indicating that the model has good predictive properties.
As a retrospective analysis, this study had some limitations. First, the study results may have been influenced by factors such as recall bias and follow-up timeframe. Second, the present study only observed the development of postoperative intestinal fistula, whereas the reoperation rate, hospitalization rate, and the development of other complications were not analyzed. Therefore, we expect that more data from patients with CD in inflammatory bowel disease centers and more comprehensive clinical data from patients will be collected in future prospective cohort studies to confirm the accuracy and utility of this prediction model.