1 / 18

Evidence-based approach in managing acute pancreatitis

Evidence-based approach in managing acute pancreatitis. James Fung Department of Surgery Tseung Kwan O Hospital. Topic for discussion. Serum amylase – how to use it in diagnosis? Severity assessment Antibiotic prophylaxis in SAP – is it useful?. Serum amylase – how to use it? .

trevet
Download Presentation

Evidence-based approach in managing acute pancreatitis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evidence-based approach in managing acute pancreatitis James Fung Department of Surgery Tseung Kwan O Hospital

  2. Topic for discussion • Serum amylase – how to use it in diagnosis? • Severity assessment • Antibiotic prophylaxis in SAP – is it useful?

  3. Serum amylase – how to use it? • Peaks within 12 – 24 hr from onset, normalize within 3 – 5 days • Pitfalls: • Falsely high level: intra-abdominal inflammation; salivary gland pathology • Falsely normal level: delayed presentation; pancreatic insufficiency; hypertriglyceridaemia1 • Spechler SJ et al. Prevalence of normal serum amylase levels in patients with acute alcoholic pancreatitis. Dig Dis Sci 1983; 28:865-9

  4. Serum amylase – how to use it? • Sn and Sp varies with diagnostic cut-off value • Steinberg WM et al. Diagnostic assays in acute pancreatitis. A study of sensitivity and specificity. Ann Intern Med 1985;102:576-80 • Thomson HJ et al. Diagnosis of acute pancreatitis: a proposed sequence of biochemical investigations. Scand J Gastroenterol 1987;22:719-24

  5. Use of serum amylase – summary • Useful only when used in a correct clinical context • Diagnostic accuracy depends on threshold • Use supplementary tools when in doubt

  6. Severity assessment

  7. Glasgow score1 Within 48 hrs PaO2 <60mmHg Albumin <32 g/L Ca++ <2mmol/L WBC >15 x 109/L AST/ALT >200U/L LDH > 600U/L Glucose >10mmol/L Urea >16mmol/L Ranson score2 On admission: Age, WBC, glucose, LDH, AST Within 48 hr: Haematocrit, BUN, estimated fluid shift, PaO2, base deficit, Ca++ Severity scoring systems • Blamey et al. Prognostic factors in acute pancreatitis. GUT 1984; 25:1340-6 • Ranson et al. Etiological and prognostic factors in human acute pancreatitis: a review. Am J Gastroenterol 1982;77:633-8

  8. Severity scoring systems • Sn for predicting poor outcome: • Glasgow score – 61%1 • Ranson score – 70%2 • 48hr for complete scoring • Corfield et al. Prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis: Prospective comparison of three prognostic indices. Lancet 1985;2:403-7 • Ranson et al. Etiological and prognostic factors in human acute pancreatitis: a review. Am J Gastroenterol 1982;77:633-8

  9. Severity scoring systems • APACHE II • 12 physiological / biochemical findings + age + chronic health survey • Sn up to 95%1 • Daily / repeated scoring as reassessment • Immediate scoring after admission • Too complicated for use outside ICU • Wilson C et al. Prediction of outcome in acute pancreatitis: a comparative study of APACHE II, clinical assessment and multiple factor scoring systems. BJS 1990;77:1260-4

  10. Severity assessment – CRP • CRP • Serum level increase the degree of SIRS • Cut-off value of 150mg/L (Sentorini Consensus)1 • Sn and Sp (prediction of septic complication) ~ 80%2 • Peaks by 36hr after onset • Dervenis C et al. Diagnosis, objective assessment of severity, and management of acute pancreatitis. Santorini Consensus Conference. Int J Pancreatol 1999;25:195-210 • Vesentini S et al. Prospective comparison of CRP level, Ranson score and contrast-enhanced computed tomography in the prediction of septic complications of acute pancreatitis. BJS 1993;80:755-7

  11. Severity assessment – summary • Should not rely on scoring system for severity assessment • Frequent clinical +/- biochemical assessment is most important • Aim at early detection of organ dysfunction

  12. Treatment – antibiotics prophylaxis? • Rationale: • To prevent the life threatening bacterial infection of pancreatic necrosis • Concerns: • Antimicrobial resistance1 • Opportunistic fungal infection2 • Bassi C et al. Controlled clinical trial of Pefloxacin versus Imipenem in severe acute pancreatitis. Gastroenterology 1998; 115:1513-17 • Eatock FC et al. Fungal infection of pancreatic necrosis is associated with increased mortality. BJS 1999;86 supp 1:78

  13. Treatment – antibiotics prophylaxis?

  14. Treatment – antibiotics prophylaxis? • Cochrane review 2007 • Included 5 RCTs comparing antibiotics prophylaxis vs no prophylaxis • Significant reduction of mortality in antibiotics prophylaxis group (6% vs 15%) • Both significant reduction of infected necrosis (16% vs 29%)and mortality (6% vs 17%) in beta-lactam prophylaxis subgroup

  15. Antibiotics prophylaxis – summary • Current evidence is still not concrete enough to make clear conclusion • Antibiotics prophylaxis probably gives a marginal benefit to SAP patients • Duration of treatment should last for at least 14 days

  16. Thank you

More Related