Wednesday, 24 April, 2024
HomeInternationalHalf of patients should not have had mesh surgery, UK hospital admits

Half of patients should not have had mesh surgery, UK hospital admits

Almost half of the patients given a controversial artificial mesh surgical intervention for bowel prolapse should not have been operated upon, an NHS hospital trust admits in a BBC News report.

North Bristol NHS Trust has told 57 patients at Southmead Hospital in Bristol they should have been offered alternative treatment first.

Surgeon Tony Dixon was suspended in 2017 after concerns were first raised. Dozens of women said they were left in severe pain after pelvic floor surgery using artificial mesh.

The report says Dixon pioneered the use of artificial mesh to lift prolapsed bowels – a technique known as laparoscopic ventral mesh rectopexy (LVMR) – often caused by childbirth.

The report says the trust carried out a review after by patients who suffered complications and ended up in chronic pain following the procedure. The operations began in the early 2000s, although the review only investigated cases from 2007 to 2017.

The report says the vast majority of the operations were carried out by Dixon, but some were performed by a further three surgeons. The trust said although their operations were carried out successfully, the 57 patients were told they "should have been offered alternative treatments before proceeding to surgery". A further 73 patients have been told their surgery was appropriate, and investigations into 13 other cases are still to be completed.

The trust's medical director, Dr Chris Burton, said he wanted to apologise to patients who received unnecessary surgery. "It is unacceptable and we are taking it extremely seriously," he said. He added immediate action was taken to "ensure it couldn't happen again", and patients have been supported. "We will keep investigating to ensure we have identified those patients affected by these issues, and to find out what happened to learn lessons for future care."

The report says Dixon, who also performed operations at Spire Hospital in Bristol, said he was "unable to comment on specific allegations… due to patient confidentiality and while relevant investigations are on-going". "There is a need for caution in comparing the use of mesh in different procedures with very different risks and outcomes," he added.

Spire Healthcare said in the report it was carrying out a similar review which it hoped would be complete in May.

[link url="https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-bristol-47705748"]BBC News report[/link]

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.