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Acute pancreatitis precedes chronic pancreatitis in the majority of patients: Results from the NAPS2 consortium

Authors :
Vikesh K. Singh
David C. Whitcomb
Peter A. Banks
Samer AlKaade
Michelle A. Anderson
Stephen T. Amann
Randall E. Brand
Darwin L. Conwell
Gregory A. Cote
Timothy B. Gardner
Andres Gelrud
Nalini Guda
Christopher E. Forsmark
Michele Lewis
Stuart Sherman
Thiruvengadam Muniraj
Joseph Romagnuolo
Xiaoqing Tan
Gong Tang
Bimaljit S. Sandhu
Adam Slivka
C. Mel Wilcox
Dhiraj Yadav
Peter Banks
Darwin Conwell
Simon K. Lo
Timothy Gardner
John Baillie
Robert Hawes
Christopher Lawrence
Babak Etemad
Mark DeMeo
Michael Kochman
Judah N. Abberbock
M. Michael Barmada
Emil Bauer
Elizabeth Kennard
Jessica LaRusch
Michael O'Connell
Kimberly Stello
Jyothsna Talluri
Stephen R. Wisniewski
Frank Burton
James DiSario
Mary Money
William Steinberg
Source :
Pancreatology
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The mechanistic definition of chronic pancreatitis (CP) identifies acute pancreatitis (AP) as a precursor stage. We hypothesized that clinical AP frequently precedes the diagnosis of CP and is associated with patient- and disease-related factors. We describe the prevalence, temporal relationship and associations of AP in a well-defined North American cohort. METHODS: We evaluated data from 883 patients with CP prospectively enrolled in the North American Pancreatitis Studies across 27 US centers between 2000 and 2014. We determined how often patients had one or more episodes of AP and its occurrence in relationship to the diagnosis of CP. We used multivariable logistic regression to determine associations for prior AP. RESULTS: There were 624/883 (70.7%) patients with prior AP, among whom 161 (25.8%) had AP within 2 years, 115 (18.4%) within 3–5 years, and 348 (55.8%) >5 years prior to CP diagnosis. Among 504 AP patients with available information, 436 (86.5%) had >1 episode. On multivariable analyses, factors associated with increased odds of having prior AP were a younger age at CP diagnosis, white race, abdominal pain, pseudocyst(s) and pancreatic duct dilatation/stricture, while factors associated with a lower odds of having prior AP were exocrine insufficiency and pancreatic atrophy. When compared with patients with 1 episode, those with >1 AP episode were diagnosed with CP an average of 5 years earlier. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly three-quarters of patients were diagnosed with AP prior to CP diagnosis. Identifying which AP patients are at-risk for future progression to CP may provide opportunities for primary and secondary prevention.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pancreatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec8d685701c5f9efe0dd0a49b72fe138