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Debridement and Closed Packing for Sterile or Infected Necrotizing Pancreatitis

Authors :
Carlos Fernandez-del Castillo
J. Ruben Rodriguez
A. Oswaldo Razo
Sarah P. Thayer
Javier Targarona
Andrew L. Warshaw
David W. Rattner
Source :
Annals of Surgery. 247:294-299
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2008.

Abstract

To examine the surgical indications and clinical outcomes of a large cohort of patients with necrotizing pancreatitis.Mortality after debridement for necrotizing pancreatitis continues to be inordinately high. The clinical experience with patients who underwent uniform surgical treatment for necrotizing pancreatitis at the Massachusetts General Hospital over a 15-year period is described.Retrospective review of 167 patients with necrotizing pancreatitis who required intervention and were treated with single stage debridement and a closed packing technique. Particular emphasis was placed on the indication for surgery and the presence of infected necrosis. Multiple logistic regression models were used to identify predictors of mortality.The primary preoperative indication for operation was infected necrosis (51%), but intraoperative cultures proved that 72% of the entire cohort was infected. The rate of reoperation was 12.6%, and 29.9% of patients required percutaneous interventional radiology drainage after initial debridement. Overall operative mortality was 11.4% (19/167), but higher in patients who were operated upon before 28 days (20.3% vs. 5.1%, P = 0.002). Other important predictors of mortality included organ failureor =3 (OR = 2.4, P = 0.001), postoperative intensive care unit stayor =6 days (OR = 15.9, P = 0.001), and female gender (OR = 5.41, P = 0.02).Open, transperitoneal debridement followed by closed packing and drainage results in the lowest reported mortality and reoperation rates, and provides a standard for comparing other methods of treatment. A negative FNA does not reliably rule out infection. The clinical status of the patients and not proof of infection should determine the need for debridement.

Details

ISSN :
00034932
Volume :
247
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1607a73b3fc5f5756b15a10df422b444
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0b013e31815b6976