Open Pancreatic Necrosectomy in the Multidisciplinary Management of Postinflammatory Necrosis

Adult Male Patient Care Team Pancreatitis, Acute Necrotizing Pancreatic Diseases Length of Stay Middle Aged 3. Good health Pancreatic Fistula 03 medical and health sciences Postoperative Complications Treatment Outcome 0302 clinical medicine Humans Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures Female Digestive System Surgical Procedures APACHE Aged Retrospective Studies
DOI: 10.1097/sla.0b013e3181b59303 Publication Date: 2010-04-15T11:01:08Z
ABSTRACT
To examine clinical outcome in a consecutive cohort of patients undergoing open necrosectomy for postinflammatory necrosis.The last decade has witnessed major developments in the surgical management of pancreatic necrosis. Minimally invasive approaches have become established. However, there are limited data from contemporary open necrosectomy, in particular where multidisciplinary care and aggressive interventional radiology are used. This report provides data on outcome from open necrosectomy in a tertiary referral Hepatobiliary unit over the last decade.During the period January 1, 2000 to July 31, 2008, 1535 patients were admitted with a final discharge code of acute pancreatitis. Twenty-eight (1.8%) of all admissions underwent open surgical necrosectomy. Twenty-four (86%) were tertiary referral patients.The median APACHE II score on admission was 10.5 (5-26). Median logistic organ dysfunction score on admission was 3 (0-10). Median LODS score after surgery was 2 (0-8). Twenty patients (71%) underwent radiologically guided drainage of collections before surgery. Thirty-day mortality occurred in 2 (7%), 4 further deaths occurred in patients after discharge from intensive care resulting in a total of 6 (22%) episode-related deaths.Modern open necrosectomy can be performed without the procedure-related deterioration in organ dysfunction associated with major debridement. Multidisciplinary care with an emphasis on aggressive radiologic intervention before and after surgery results in acceptable outcomes in this cohort of critically ill patients. Newer laparoscopic techniques must demonstrate similar outcomes in the setting of stage-matched severity before wider acceptance.
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