Antibiotic prophylaxis and post-procedure infectious complications in endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with peroral cholangioscopy.

Endosc Int Open

Department of Research and Development and Department of Surgery, Central Hospital, Region Kronoberg, Växjö, Sweden.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Single-operator peroral cholangioscopy (SOC) has gained popularity in treating biliary and pancreatic conditions but has higher infection rates than traditional methods like ERCP, leading to recommendations for antibiotic prophylaxis (AP).
  • A study analyzed data from 124,921 ERCP procedures, focusing on 1,605 with SOC, aiming to assess the impact of AP on post-procedure infections and overall adverse events (AEs).
  • Findings revealed that AP administration did not significantly reduce rates of infectious complications (3.4% with AP vs. 3.7% without) or overall AEs (14.6% with AP vs. 15.2% without), raising questions about the necessity of AP in these procedures.

Article Abstract

Single-operator peroral cholangioscopy (SOC) has gained increasing attention in modern biliary and pancreatic therapy and diagnosis. This procedure has shown higher rates of infectious complications than conventional endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP); therefore, many guidelines recommend antibiotic prophylaxis (AP). However, whether AP administration decreases infectious or overall adverse events (AEs) has been little studied. We aimed to study whether AP affects post-procedure infectious or overall AEs in ERCP with SOC. We collected data from the Swedish Registry for Gallstone Surgery and ERCP (GallRiks). Of the 124,921 extracted ERCP procedures performed between 2008 and 2021, 1,605 included SOC and represented the study population. Exclusion criteria were incomplete 30-day follow-up, ongoing antibiotic use, and procedures with unspecified indication. Type and dose of antibiotics were not reported. Post-procedure infectious complications and AEs at 30-day follow-up were the main outcomes. AP was administered to 1,307 patients (81.4%). In this group, 3.4% of the patients had infectious complications compared with 3.7% in the non-AP group. The overall AE rates in the AP and non-AP groups were 14.6% and 15.2%, respectively. The incidence of cholangitis was 3.1% in the AP group and 3.4% in the non-AP group. Using multivariable analysis, both infectious complications (odds ratio [OR] 0.92, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.54-1.57) and AEs (OR 0.87, 95% CI 0.65-1.16) remained unaffected by AP administration. No reduction in infectious complication rates and AEs was seen with AP administration for SOC. The continued need for AP in SOC remains uncertain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10719045PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2210-6283DOI Listing

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