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Natural History After Acute Necrotizing Pancreatitis: a Large US Tertiary Care Experience
Authors:Chandraprakash Umapathy  Amit Raina  Shreyas Saligram  Gong Tang  Georgios I Papachristou  Mordechai Rabinovitz  Jennifer Chennat  Herbert Zeh  Amer H Zureikat  Melissa E Hogg  Kenneth K Lee  Melissa I Saul  David C Whitcomb  Adam Slivka  Dhiraj Yadav
Institution:1.Division of General Internal Medicine,University of Pittsburgh,Pittsburgh,USA;2.Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition,East Carolina University,Greenville,USA;3.Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Motility,University of Kansas Medical Center,Kansas City,USA;4.Department of Biostatistics,University of Pittsburgh,Pittsburgh,USA;5.Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition,University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,Pittsburgh,USA;6.Division of Surgical Oncology,University of Pittsburgh,Pittsburgh,USA;7.Department of Biomedical Informatics,University of Pittsburgh,Pittsburgh,USA
Abstract:

Background

Most studies of acute necrotizing pancreatitis (ANP) focus on short-term outcomes. We evaluated long-term survival and outcomes following ANP.

Methods

Patients treated for ANP at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center from 2001 to 2008 were studied. Data on presentation and course during initial hospitalization and follow-up (median 34 months) was extracted.

Results

Mean age of patients (n?=?167) was 53?±?16 years; 70 % were male, 94 % white, 71 % transfers, 52 % biliary etiology, and 78 % had first-attack of acute pancreatitis. Majority had severe disease with high Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE-II) score (median 11), length of stay (median 26 days), intensive care unit (ICU) admission (87 %), presence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) (90 %), persistent organ failure (60 %), and infected necrosis (50 %). Intervention was needed in 74 %. Eighteen (10.8 %) patients died during index hospitalization, 9 (5.4 %) during the first year, and 13 (7.8 %) after 1 year. Median survival was significantly shorter when compared with age- and sex-matched US general population (9.1 vs. 26.1 years, p?<?0.001). Increasing age (HR 1.05), persistent organ failure (HR 4.5), and >50 % necrosis (HR 3.8) were independent predictors of death at 1 year. In eligible patients, new-onset diabetes, oral pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy, and disability were noted in 45, 25, and 53 %, respectively.

Conclusion

ANP significantly impacts long-term survival. A high proportion of patients develop functional derangement and disability following ANP.
Keywords:
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