Editorial
Copyright ©2010 Baishideng.
World J Gastrointest Surg. Jul 27, 2010; 2(7): 231-241
Published online Jul 27, 2010. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v2.i7.231
Table 1 Studies comparing healing and recurrence rates of different pharmacological therapies
S/NRef.Study detailsHealingRemarks
1Lund et al[17] 1997 Double armed, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs placebo 80 patientsGTN-68% healing rate within 8 wk Placebo-8% healing rate Recurrences-7.9% in GTN group. Treated successfully with additional 6 wk of GTN
2Kennedy et al[18] 1999 Double arm, prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled0.2% GTN vs placebo 43 patientsGTN group-46% healing rate Placebo group-16% healing rateStatistically significant
3Altomare et al[19] 2000 Double arm, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs placebo 132 patientsGTN-49.2% healing rate Placebo-51.7% healing rate Recurrence-19% in GTN groupFailed to establish superiority of GTN over placebo
4Scholefield et al[20] 2003 Four armed, prospective, randomized0.1% GTN vs 0.2% GTN vs 0.4% GTN vs placebo 200 patientsIntention-to-treat analysis: Placebo-37.5% healing rate 0.1% GTN-46.9% healing rate 0.2% GTN-40.4% healing rate 0.4% GTN-54.1% healing rateHigh placebo healing rates noted-possibly due to inclusion of acute fissures Lowest healing rate with 0.2% GTN likely due to anomaly due to small sample size
5Kocher et al[23] 2002 Double arm, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs 2% Diltiazem cream 61 patientsGTN-25/29 (86.2%) patients improved or healed Diltiazem-24/31 (77.4%) patients healed or improved
6Knight et al[27] 2001 Single arm, prospective, non-randomized2% Diltiazem cream for chronic anal fissures 71 patients59/66 (89.4%) patients healed within 16 wk 7/59 (11.8%) patients on follow-up developed recurrences
7Carapeti et al[25] 2002 Two separate pilot studies2% Diltiazem cream vs 0.1% bethanechol gel 30 patientsDiltiazem-67% healing rate Bethanechol-60% healing rate
8Jonas et al[26] 2002 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedTopical 2% Diltiazem for fissures failing GTN therapy 39 patients49% healing rate
9Maria et al[21] 1998 Double arm, prospective, randomizedBotulinum toxin 20 units vs saline 30 patientsBotulinum toxin-11/15 (73.3%) patients healed at 2 mo. Remaining 4 patients (26.7%) healed after additional 25 units Saline-2/12 patients healed at 2 mo No recurrences in the botulinum group
10Lindsey et al[24] 2003 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedBotulinum toxin 20 units injection for non-healing anal fissures after initial 8 wk of 0.2% GTN 40 patients43% complete healing 12% unhealed with symptom resolution 18% unhealed with symptom improvement 27% unhealed with no symptom improvement 27% underwent eventual surgery
11Brisinda et al[22] 1999 Dual arm, prospective randomized, non-controlledBotulinum toxin 20 units injection vs 0.2% GTN for 8 wk Failure to heal after 8 wk-treatment offered from the other arm 50 patientsBotulinum toxin–96% healed fissures after 2 mo 0.2% GTN-60% healed fissures after 2 moStatistically significant
12Jones et al[28] 2006 Dual arm, prospective randomized, non-controlledBotulinum toxin 25 units injection and 0.2% GTN vs Botulinum toxin 25 units alone 30 patientsBotulinum toxin and GTN-47% complete healing at 8 wk Botulinum toxin alone-27% complete healing Botulinum toxin and GTN-27% treatment failure by 6 mo Botulinum toxin alone-47% treatment failure by 6 moNot statistically significant Not statistically significant
13Garrido et al[8] 2007 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedGonyautoxin 100 units injection 23 patients18/23 patients-healed in 7 d 3/23-healed in 12 d 2/23 patients-healed in 14 d
Table 2 Studies comparing complication rates of different pharmacological therapies
S/NRef.Study detailsResults
1Lund et al[17] 1997 Double armed, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs placebo 80 patientsHeadaches-56.4% (GTN) vs 17.9% (placebo)
2Altomare et al[19] 2000 Double arm, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs placebo 132 patientsHeadaches-33.8% (GTN) vs 7.8% (placebo)
3Scholefield et al[20] 2003 Four armed, prospective, randomized0.1% GTN vs 0.2% GTN vs 0.4% GTN vs placebo 200 patientsHeadaches-31% (treatment group) vs 12.5% (placebo group) Severe headaches-19.6% (0.4% GTN) vs 5.9% (0.2% GTN) vs 2% (0.1% GTN) vs 4.2% (placebo)
4Knight et al[27] 2001 Single arm, prospective, non-randomized2% Diltiazem cream for chronic anal fissures 71 patientsComplications: 1 (headache) and 1 (allergic dermatitis)
5Jonas et al[26] 2002 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedTopical 2% diltiazem for fissures failing GTN therapy 39 patientsPerineal itchiness-10% (no drop-out from treatment)
6Maria et al[21] 1998 Double arm, prospective, randomizedBotulinum toxin 20 units vs saline 30 patientsNo significant complications noted in the botulinum toxin group
7Lindsey et al[24] 2003 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedBotulinum toxin 20 units injection for non-healing anal fissures after initial 8 wk of 0.2% GTN 40 patients18% minor incontinence-resolved
8Brisinda et al[22] 1999 Dual arm, prospective randomized, non-randomizedBotulinum toxin 20 units injection vs 0.2% GTN for 8 wk Failure to heal after 8 wk-treatment offered from the other arm 50 patientsHeadaches – 20% in GTN arm No bleeding complications in Botulinum arm
9Jones et al[28] 2006 Dual arm, prospective randomized, non-randomizedBotulinum toxin 25 units injection and 0.2% GTN vs Botulinum toxin 25 units alone 30 patientsBotulinum toxin and GTN-33% transient incontinence rate Botulinum toxin alone-13% transient incontinence rate
10Garrido et al[8] 2007 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedGonyautoxin 100 units injection 23 patientsNo flatus or fecal incontinence
Table 3 Studies comparing healing rates of different surgical therapies
S/NRef.Study detailsResultsRemarks
1Garcea et al[30] 2002 Single arm, retrospective, non-randomizedConservative lateral sphincterotomy for chronic anal fissures 65 patients97% healing rate98% of patients had prior failure of healing with GTN Maximum of 5 mm of internal sphincter divided
2Tocchi et al[31] 2004 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedLateral subcutaneous internal sphincterotomy for non-responders to 0.2% GTN 164 patients100% healing rate within 6 wk
3Liratzopoulos et al[32] 2006 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedLateral subcutaneous sphincterotomy for chronic anal fissures 246 patientsOverall healing rate-97.5% at 3 mo
4Wiley et al[33] 2004 Dual arm, prospective, randomizedOpen vs closed lateral sphincterotomy 79 patientsOpen technique-95% healing rates Closed technique-97% healing ratesClosed technique: Blind division of internal sphincter guided by finger Open technique: Division under direct vision
5Jensen et al[34] 1984 Double arm, prospective, randomizedLateral sphincterotomy vs simple anal dilatationSphincterotomy-100% healing rate Anal dilatation-96.4% Recurrences-3.3% (sphincterotomy) vs 28.6% (anal dilatation)
6Renzi et al[13] 2007 Double arm, prospective, randomizedPneumatic balloon dilatation vs lateral sphincterotomy 53 patientsBalloon dilatation-83.3% healing rate Sphincterotomy-92%Balloon dilated to 20 PSI and maintained for 6 min Division of half of internal sphincter
7Richard et al[35] 2000 Double arm, prospective, randomizedInternal sphincterotomy vs 0.25% GTN 90 patientsInternal sphincterotomy-92.1% healing rate at 6 wk GTN-27.2% healing rate at 6 wk 5.5% of GTN group had an eventual sphincterotomy Recurrences-0 (sphincterotomy) vs 5/44 (11.4%) (GTN)
8Evans et al[36] 2001 Dual arm, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs lateral sphincterotomy for chronic anal fissures 65 patientsSphincterotomy-97% healing rate after 8 wk GTN-60.6% healing rate after 8 wk 12/13 (92%) of patients not healed by GTN healed after sphincterotomy Recurrence-50% (GTN) vs 15.4% (sphincterotomy) 11/13 (85%) of GTN failures not compliant with treatment-7/13 (54%) (lack of effect) and 4/13 (31%) (headaches)
9Brown et al[37] 2007 Double arm, prospective, randomized, multi-centric2% GTN vs lateral internal sphincterotomy at 6 yr post-treatment 82 patientsGTN-11/27 (40.7%) patients had recurrence Sphincterotomy-no recurrence Patient satisfaction-100% (sphincterotomy) vs 56% (GTN)60% of GTN patients underwent subsequent sphincterotomy
10Menteş et al[29] 2003 Double arm, prospective, randomizedBotulinum toxin 0.3 units/kg vs internal sphincterotomy 111 patientsSphincterotomy healing rates-82% (1 mo)-98% (2 mo)-94% (6 mo)-94% ( 12 mo) Botulinum toxin healing rates-62.3% (1 mo)-73.8% (2 mo)-86.9% (6 mo, with a second injection given at end of 2nd month for non-healers)-75.4% (12 mo, with 7 patients having recurrences)
11Schiano di Visconte et al[14] 2009 Double arm, prospective, randomized0.25% GTN and anal cryothermal dilators BD vs 0.4% GTN 60 patientsDilators and 0.25% GTN-86.6% healing rate 0.4% GTN-73.3% healing rate Recurrence after 1 year-3.3% (GTN and dilators) vs 13.3% (GTN only)Dilators soaked for 15 min in 40 degrees water
12Yucel et al[15] 2009 Double arm, prospective, randomizedControlled intermittent anal dilatation (CIAD) vs lateral sphincterotomy 40 patientsDilatation-90% healing rate at 2 mo Sphincterotomy-85% healing rate at 2 moAdjustable anal speculum dilated to 4.8 cm followed by relaxation for 15 times over 5 min
13Singh et al[9] 2005 Single arm, prospective, non-randomisedRotational flap for treatment of chronic anal fissures 21 patientsComplete healing in 17/21 (81.0%) patients
14Giordano et al[10] 2009 Single arm, prospective, non-randomisedCutaneous advancement flap anoplasty for chronic anal fissures 51 patients98% healing rate No recurrences at median 6 mo follow-up 3/51 developed new fissures at new locations
15Pelta et al[11] 2007 Double arm, prospective, randomizedSubcutaneous fissurotomy for chronic anal fissures 109 patients98.2% healing rateOpening up of subcutaneous tract beneath fissure and excision of sentinel tag
16Soll et al[12] 2004 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedFissurectomy and botulinum toxin 20-25 units for chronic anal fissures not responsive to medical therapy 31 patients93% healing rate by 16 wk with 7% having symptomatic relief despite non-healing fissures
17Gupta[16] 2008 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedClosed anal sphincter manipulation (sphincterolysis) for chronic anal fissures 312 patients96.5% healing rate within 8 wk No recurrenceFinger fracture of internal sphincter fibres over left lateral side without breaching anal mucosa
18Tan et al[7] 2009 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedEffect of posterior perineal support on chronic anal fissure healingModerate (or more) improvement in: Pain-50% (2 wk) and 97.5% (3 mo) Bleeding-46.9% (2 wk) and 65.6% (3 mo) Constipation-40.6% (2 wk) and 84.4% (3 mo) Need for laxatives-15.6% (2 wk) and 40.6% (3 mo) Abdominal discomfort-31.3% (2 wk) and 68.8% (3 mo) Decrease in pain score from 5 (before treatment) to 0 (after 3 mo)
Table 4 Studies comparing complication rates of different surgical therapies
S/NRef.Study detailsResults
1Garcea et al[30] 2002 Single arm, retrospective, non-randomizedConservative lateral sphincterotomy for chronic anal fissures 65 patientsFlatus or fecal incontinence-3.3%
2Tocchi et al[31] 2004 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedLateral subcutaneous internal sphincterotomy for non-responders to 0.2% GTN 164 patientsEarly gas and fecal soilage-9.1% Some degree of incontinence at 3 mo-3% (3/5 patients had pre-op external sphincter damage)
3Liratzopoulos et al[32] 2006 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedLateral subcutaneous sphincterotomy for chronic anal fissures 246 patientsIncidence of new continence at 48 wk-7.02%
4Wiley et al[33] 2004 Dual arm, prospective, randomizedOpen vs closed lateral sphincterotomy 79 patientsOverall incontinence rate-6.8% (no significant difference between the 2 techniques)
5Elsebae et al[38] 2007 Dual arm, prospective, randomizedImpact of the extent of division of internal anal sphincter on fecal incontinence 108 patientsUp till dentate line-10.86% incontinence rate Up till apex of fissure-2.17% incontinence rate
6Jensen et al[34] 1984 Double arm, prospective, randomizedLateral sphincterotomy vs simple anal dilatationFlatus incontinence-0% (sphincterotomy) vs 28.6% (anal dilatation) Fecal incontinence-0% (sphincterotomy) vs 7.1% (anal dilatation) Fecal soiling of underwear-3.3% (sphincterotomy) vs 39.3% (anal dilatation) All above results statistically significant
7Renzi et al[13] 2007 Double arm, prospective, randomizedPneumatic balloon dilatation vs lateral sphincterotomy 53 patientsFecal incontinence-0% (balloon dilatation) vs 16% (sphincterotomy)
8Richard et al[35] 2000 Double arm, prospective, randomizedInternal sphincterotomy vs 0.25% GTN 90 patientsHeadaches-84% (GTN) No incontinence complications Patient satisfaction-97% (sphincterotomy) vs 61% (GTN)
9Evans et al[36] 2001 Dual arm, prospective, randomized0.2% GTN vs lateral sphincterotomy for chronic anal fissures 65 patientsGTN-31% headaches No mention of sphincterotomy complications
10Brown et al[37] 2007 Double arm, prospective, randomized, multi-centric2% GTN vs lateral internal sphincterotomy at 6 years post-treatment 82 patientsNo difference in fecal incontinence scoring between both groups No difference in symptoms of incontinence-16/24 (66.7%) (sphincterotomy) vs 18/27 (66.7%) (GTN)
11Menteş et al[29] 2003 Double arm, prospective, randomizedBotulinum toxin 0.3 units/kg vs internal sphincterotomy 111 patientsIncontinence-8/50 (16%) patients (sphincterotomy) had transient flatus incontinence vs 0 (botulinum toxin)
12Schiano di Visconte et al[14] 2009 Double arm, prospective, randomized0.25% GTN and anal cryothermal dilators BD vs 0.4% GTN 60 patientsNo incontinence reported
13Yucel et al[15] 2009 Double arm, prospective, randomizedControlled intermittent anal dilatation (CIAD) vs lateral sphincterotomy 40 patientsNo incontinence reported
14Singh et al[9] 2005 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedRotational flap for treatment of chronic anal fissures 21 patients11.8% flap uptake failure with wound dehiscence No donor site complications No new incontinence complications post-op
15Giordano et al[10] 2009 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedCutaneous advancement flap anoplasty for chronic anal fissures 51 patientsSuture line dehiscence-5.9% No incontinence complications
16Pelta et al[11] 2007 Double arm, prospective, randomizedSubcutaneous fissurotomy for chronic anal fissures 109 patientsNo incontinence complications
17Soll et al[12] 2004 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedFissurectomy and botulinum toxin 20-25 units for chronic anal fissures not responsive to medical therapy 31 patients7% flatus incontinence rate lasting maximum of 6 wk
18Gupta[16] 2008 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedClosed anal sphincter manipulation (sphincterolysis) for chronic anal fissures 312 patients11/312 patients had incontinence symptoms within first 4 wk Complete continence restored in 97% of patients after 1 mo
19Tan et al[7] 2009 Single arm, prospective, non-randomizedEffect of posterior perineal support on chronic anal fissure healingNo complications noted