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The role of antibiotics in the management of patients with acute necrotizing pancreatitis. | LitMetric

The role of antibiotics in the management of patients with acute necrotizing pancreatitis.

Curr Infect Dis Rep

Medical Education and Research, Maimonides Medical Center, State University of New York-Health Sciences Center, 2211 Emmons Avenue, Brooklyn, NY, 11235, USA.

Published: January 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research indicates that prophylactic antibiotics are ineffective in preventing complications from pancreatic necrosis, shifting the approach to a more conservative treatment strategy.
  • Infected pancreatic necrosis should be treated with targeted antibiotics, while surgery is reserved for cases where the patient's condition worsens despite antibiotic treatment.
  • The timing of surgical interventions should be personalized, considering factors such as the patient's health, the type of infection, and available medical resources.

Article Abstract

Our understanding of the role of antibiotics in the management of patients with pancreatic necrosis has changed over the past 5 years. Initial studies suggested that antibiotics were useful in preventing infection of necrosis, septic complications, and mortality in patients with acute pancreatitis; however, more recent, better-designed studies established that prophylactic antibiotics are not helpful. In the absence of infection, sterile necrosis is treated conservatively. With insufficient evidence to recommend antibiotics, these agents should be reserved to treat established infection of pancreatic necrosis. Infected necrosis is treated by targeting microbes with pancreatic-penetrating antibiotics (eg, carbapenems, quinolones in combination with metronidazole, or high-dose cephalosporins). If the patient with infected necrosis remains septic or deteriorates, surgical intervention should be performed urgently. Stable patients with infected necrosis can be managed more conservatively in a closely monitored environment. Recent studies suggest that many patients can clear the infection with antibiotics, but even if they do not clear the infection, delay in surgery decreases the mortality rate. Delaying surgery by using antibiotics may allow use of less invasive procedures if drainage is needed. The timing and method of interventions must be individualized based on the patient's condition, anatomic complications, patient's preference after informed consent, and expertise available at the institution.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11908-009-0071-xDOI Listing

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