Clinical course for pancreatic necrosis and pancreatic pseudocysts due to severe acute or chronic pancreatitis.

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY
Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology Pub Date : 2024-11-23 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/17562848241301945
Stefano Fusco, Greta M Hanke, Karsten Büringer, Lisa Minn, Gunnar Blumenstock, Ulrike Schempf, Martin Götz, Nisar P Malek, Dörte Wichmann, Christoph R Werner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The acute and chronic pancreatitis (CP) can lead to severe complications like walled-off necrosis, large symptomatic pseudocyst or multiorgan failure. The treatment of these complications is multivariate and can differ from conservative, symptomatic treatment or minimal-invasive, endoscopic transgastral stenting to transgastral necrosectomy.

Objectives: This study aims to analyse the clinical course for patients that develop local complications of severe pancreatitis.

Design: This is a retrospective observational single-centre study on 46 patients with severe pancreatitis.

Methods: In this retrospective single-centre study, 46 out of 474 inpatients from January 2014 to December 2020, who were treated because of an acute or CP, developed acute pancreatitis complications and could be included. We analysed and compared the clinical course of different treatments (lumen apposing metal stents, transgastral double pigtail stent, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, operation, conservative treatment) and different complications (walled-off necrosis (WON), pancreatic pseudocyst (PPC)).

Results: Forty-six patients developed an acute complication due to severe pancreatitis. Twenty-seven patients developed a WON, while 19 patients suffered from PPC. 48% of the whole cohort had an alcoholic aetiology of pancreatitis. 78% were treated with antibiotics, 48% suffered from infected pancreatitis and 22% needed intensive care treatment. WON patients more often had a longer hospitalization of more than 21 days. PPC patients were correlated with an alcoholic aetiology, whereas WON patients were inversely correlated with an alcoholic aetiology. Increased lactate dehydrogenase, lipase, and C-reactive protein levels as well as leucocyte count could be associated with a higher probability to exhibit a WON instead of another local complication. The mortality rate was low with 7% in our study.

Conclusion: WON and PPC differ in certain patients and laboratory characteristics such as aetiology, elevated laboratory values, antibiotic treatment or the duration of hospitalization. Invasive treatment is not required in all severe pancreatitis cases.

重症急性或慢性胰腺炎引起的胰腺坏死和胰腺假性囊肿的临床过程。
背景:急性和慢性胰腺炎(CP)可导致严重的并发症,如壁坏死、大的无症状假性囊肿或多器官功能衰竭。这些并发症的治疗方法多种多样,从保守、对症治疗或微创、内镜下经胃肠道支架植入术到经胃肠道坏死切除术:本研究旨在分析重症胰腺炎局部并发症患者的临床过程:这是一项回顾性单中心观察研究,研究对象为46名重症胰腺炎患者:在这项回顾性单中心研究中,2014 年 1 月至 2020 年 12 月期间因急性胰腺炎或 CP 而接受治疗的 474 例住院患者中,有 46 例出现了急性胰腺炎并发症,可以纳入研究范围。我们分析并比较了不同治疗方法(管腔贴壁金属支架、经胃肠道双猪尾支架、内镜逆行胰胆管造影、手术、保守治疗)和不同并发症(贴壁坏死(WON)、胰腺假性囊肿(PPC))的临床过程:结果:46 名患者因重症胰腺炎出现急性并发症。27名患者出现了胰壁坏死,19名患者出现了胰腺假性囊肿。整个组群中有 48% 的胰腺炎病因是酒精。78%的患者接受了抗生素治疗,48%的患者患有感染性胰腺炎,22%的患者需要接受重症监护治疗。WON患者的住院时间通常超过21天。PPC患者与酒精性病因相关,而WON患者与酒精性病因成反比。乳酸脱氢酶、脂肪酶和C反应蛋白水平以及白细胞计数的升高可能与出现WON而非其他局部并发症的概率较高有关。在我们的研究中,死亡率较低,仅为 7%:WON和PPC在某些患者和实验室特征(如病因、实验室值升高、抗生素治疗或住院时间)上存在差异。并非所有重症胰腺炎病例都需要进行侵入性治疗。
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来源期刊
Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology
Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
2.40%
发文量
103
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology is an open access journal which delivers the highest quality peer-reviewed original research articles, reviews, and scholarly comment on pioneering efforts and innovative studies in the medical treatment of gastrointestinal and hepatic disorders. The journal has a strong clinical and pharmacological focus and is aimed at an international audience of clinicians and researchers in gastroenterology and related disciplines, providing an online forum for rapid dissemination of recent research and perspectives in this area. The editors welcome original research articles across all areas of gastroenterology and hepatology. The journal publishes original research articles and review articles primarily. Original research manuscripts may include laboratory, animal or human/clinical studies – all phases. Letters to the Editor and Case Reports will also be considered.
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