F. Seowchoen et al., RESULTS OF A POLICY OF SELECTIVE IMMEDIATE FISTULOTOMY FOR PRIMARY ANAL ABSCESS, Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery, 63(6), 1993, pp. 485-489
A prospective study of a policy of selective immediate fistulotomy in
the management of acute primary anal abscesses was performed. Eighty-n
ine patients (74%) underwent simple drainage only, as no internal open
ings were found during drainage of pus (group A). Thirty-one patients
(26%) had drainage of pus and immediate fistulotomy (group B). Follow
up for groups A and B occurred at a median of 122 weeks (104-136 weeks
) and 121 weeks (104-136 weeks), respectively. No patient in group A h
ad residual problems with anal continence whilst two patients (6.5%) f
rom group B had minor anal incontinence following the initial procedur
e (p = 0.07). Ten patients from group A (11%) and four patients from g
roup B (13%) developed recurrent anal sepsis. The overall rate of recu
rrent sepsis was 11.7%. In those patients who had incision and drainag
e alone, 90% of those who developed a recurrence and 71% of those who
did not develop a recurrence grew gut-associated organisms from pus ob
tained during the initial drainage of the acute abscess, giving a posi
tive predictive value for recurrence of 13.8% for a culture of gut-ass
ociated organisms. The positive predictive value for recurrent sepsis
for both groups taken together for a culture of gut-associated organis
ms was 28.2%. Patients with acute primary anal abscess should be treat
ed with simple drainage.