1. Should We Change the Initial Treatment of Renal or Retroperitoneal Abscess in High Risk Patients?
- Author
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Fukashi Yamamichi, Issei Tokimatsu, Koichi Kitagawa, Soichi Arakawa, Katsumi Shigemura, and Masato Fujisawa
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Diabetes Complications ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Japan ,Recurrence ,Risk Factors ,X ray computed ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Initial treatment ,Retroperitoneal Space ,Risk factor ,Retrospective Studies ,Ultrasonography ,High risk patients ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Abscess ,Surgery ,Hospitalization ,Treatment Outcome ,Multicenter study ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,Kidney Diseases ,Radiology ,Retroperitoneal abscess ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Introduction: This study examined the risk factors for initial treatment failure in renal or retroperitoneal abscess as a multicenter study. Materials and Methods: This retrospective analysis investigated consecutive patients with renal or retroperitoneal abscess who were hospitalized in Japan. The outcomes of these patients were classified into “cured” and “failure or recurrence.” The potential clinical risk factors examined were abscess size, diabetes mellitus, major organ failure, laboratory data, fever, drainage, and causative organisms, for instance. Results: Of the 74 patients, 40 (54.1%) were diagnosed with renal abscess and 34 (45.9%) with retroperitoneal abscess, 51 (68.9%) were cured by initial treatments, and 23 (31.1%) underwent failure or relapse; 33 (44.6%) were men and 41 (55.4%) were women. In detail, 36 patients were cured by conservative therapy only. Our multivariate analysis data showed that renal failure was the only significant factor for initial treatment failure (p = 0.0281). Conclusions: Our multivariate analysis showed that renal failure was a significant risk factor for initial treatment failure or recurrence.
- Published
- 2017