AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the prevalence of acute cholangitis (AC) and cholecystitis (CC) among patients diagnosed with biliary acute pancreatitis (AP), using the 2018 Tokyo guidelines, highlighting a potential for overdiagnosis and overuse of medical interventions.
  • - Results show that around 70% of biliary AP patients met the criteria for AC/CC; antibiotic use was high (77.4%), with low mortality in mild cases but significantly higher rates in severe cases.
  • - The authors conclude that existing diagnostic criteria often overlap and may misclassify AP conditions, suggesting a need for clearer, disease-specific guidelines and randomized trials on antibiotic necessity in these patients.

Article Abstract

Background: There is a noteworthy overlap between the clinical picture of biliary acute pancreatitis (AP) and the 2018 Tokyo guidelines currently used for the diagnosis of cholangitis (AC) and cholecystitis (CC). This can lead to significant antibiotic and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) overuse.

Objectives: We aimed to assess the on-admission prevalence of AC/CC according to the 2018 Tokyo guidelines (TG18) in a cohort of biliary AP patients, and its association with antibiotic use, ERCP and clinically relevant endpoints.

Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of the Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group's prospective multicenter registry of 2195 AP cases. We grouped and compared biliary cases (n = 944) based on the on-admission fulfillment of definite AC/CC according to TG18. Aside from antibiotic use, we evaluated mortality, AC/CC/AP severity, ERCP performance and length of hospitalization. We also conducted a literature review discussing each criteria of the TG18 in the context of AP.

Results: 27.8% of biliary AP cases fulfilled TG18 for both AC and CC, 22.5% for CC only and 20.8% for AC only. Antibiotic use was high (77.4%). About 2/3 of the AC/CC cases were mild, around 10% severe. Mortality was below 1% in mild and moderate AC/CC patients, but considerably higher in severe cases (12.8% and 21.2% in AC and CC). ERCP was performed in 89.3% of AC cases, common bile duct stones were found in 41.1%.

Conclusion: Around 70% of biliary AP patients fulfilled the TG18 for AC/CC, associated with a high rate of antibiotic use. Mortality in presumed mild or moderate AC/CC is low. Each of the laboratory and clinical criteria are commonly fulfilled in biliary AP, single imaging findings are also unspecific-AP specific diagnostic criteria are needed, as the prevalence of AC/CC are likely greatly overestimated. Randomized trials testing antibiotic use are also warranted.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10576601PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ueg2.12402DOI Listing

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