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Antibiotic therapy in acute pancreatitis: From global overuse to evidence based recommendations.

Authors :
Párniczky A
Lantos T
Tóth EM
Szakács Z
Gódi S
Hágendorn R
Illés D
Koncz B
Márta K
Mikó A
Mosztbacher D
Németh BC
Pécsi D
Szabó A
Szücs Á
Varjú P
Szentesi A
Darvasi E
Erőss B
Izbéki F
Gajdán L
Halász A
Vincze Á
Szabó I
Pár G
Bajor J
Sarlós P
Czimmer J
Hamvas J
Takács T
Szepes Z
Czakó L
Varga M
Novák J
Bod B
Szepes A
Sümegi J
Papp M
Góg C
Török I
Huang W
Xia Q
Xue P
Li W
Chen W
Shirinskaya NV
Poluektov VL
Shirinskaya AV
Hegyi PJ
Bátovský M
Rodriguez-Oballe JA
Salas IM
Lopez-Diaz J
Dominguez-Munoz JE
Molero X
Pando E
Ruiz-Rebollo ML
Burgueño-Gómez B
Chang YT
Chang MC
Sud A
Moore D
Sutton R
Gougol A
Papachristou GI
Susak YM
Tiuliukin IO
Gomes AP
Oliveira MJ
Aparício DJ
Tantau M
Kurti F
Kovacheva-Slavova M
Stecher SS
Mayerle J
Poropat G
Das K
Marino MV
Capurso G
Małecka-Panas E
Zatorski H
Gasiorowska A
Fabisiak N
Ceranowicz P
Kuśnierz-Cabala B
Carvalho JR
Fernandes SR
Chang JH
Choi EK
Han J
Bertilsson S
Jumaa H
Sandblom G
Kacar S
Baltatzis M
Varabei AV
Yeshy V
Chooklin S
Kozachenko A
Veligotsky N
Hegyi P
Source :
Pancreatology : official journal of the International Association of Pancreatology (IAP) ... [et al.] [Pancreatology] 2019 Jun; Vol. 19 (4), pp. 488-499. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Apr 19.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: Unwarranted administration of antibiotics in acute pancreatitis presents a global challenge. The clinical reasoning behind the misuse is poorly understood. Our aim was to investigate current clinical practices and develop recommendations that guide clinicians in prescribing antibiotic treatment in acute pancreatitis.<br />Methods: Four methods were used. 1) Systematic data collection was performed to summarize current evidence; 2) a retrospective questionnaire was developed to understand the current global clinical practice; 3) five years of prospectively collected data were analysed to identify the clinical parameters used by medical teams in the decision making process, and finally; 4) the UpToDate Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) system was applied to provide evidence based recommendations for healthcare professionals.<br />Results: The systematic literature search revealed no consensus on the start of AB therapy in patients with no bacterial culture test. Retrospective data collection on 9728 patients from 22 countries indicated a wide range (31-82%) of antibiotic use frequency in AP. Analysis of 56 variables from 962 patients showed that clinicians initiate antibiotic therapy based on increased WBC and/or elevated CRP, lipase and amylase levels. The above mentioned four laboratory parameters showed no association with infection in the early phase of acute pancreatitis. Instead, procalcitonin levels proved to be a better biomarker of early infection. Patients with suspected infection because of fever had no benefit from antibiotic therapy.<br />Conclusions: The authors formulated four consensus statements to urge reduction of unjustified antibiotic treatment in acute pancreatitis and to use procalcitonin rather than WBC or CRP as biomarkers to guide decision-making.<br /> (Copyright © 2019 IAP and EPC. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1424-3911
Volume :
19
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Pancreatology : official journal of the International Association of Pancreatology (IAP) ... [et al.]
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31068256
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pan.2019.04.003