8 severe acute pancreatitis

33
Severe acute pancreatitis S_c7 © Academy for Infection Management 2006 (All Rights Reserved)

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Page 1: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Severe acute pancreatitis

S_c7

© Academy for Infection Management 2006 (All Rights Reserved)

Page 2: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

History

• 33-year-old male• Alcohol binge: vodka• Awake and conversant• Severe abdominal pain, vomiting, dyspnoea

Page 3: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Physical and laboratory examinations

• Temperature 38.1°C• Pulse 96 bpm, respirations 20/min• Blood pressure 110/70 mmHg• Abdomen tender, distended, quiet• Amylase 3500 IU/L• Lipase 1100 IU/L• AST >250 IU/L• LDH >350 IU/L • WBC count 16 000/mm3 • Arterial blood gases:

– pH 7.30, PaCO2 32, PaO2 58, BE -5

Page 4: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Which evaluations would you perform to determine if the patient has severe

pancreatitis?

1. C-reactive protein2. Computed tomography (CT) scan3. Severity scores

a. Ranson scoreb. Glasgow (Imrie) scorec. APACHE II or III scored. Balthazar score

Page 5: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Initial tests and treatment

• Fluid resuscitation • Chest radiography• CT• Calculation of Ranson score (at 48 hours)

Page 6: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

The patient has severe pancreatitisby CT criteria

Central necrosis of the pancreas >30%Peripancreatic oedema and inflammation

Page 7: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Ranson score: a pancreatitis-specific severity of illness score

• Age >55 years • WBC >16 000/mm3 • Glucose >200 mg/dL • LDH >350 IU/L • AST >250 IU/L

• Haematocrit decrease >10% points

• BUN increase >5 mg/dL • Serum calcium <8 mg/dL

• PaO2 <60 mm Hg

• Base deficit <-4 mEq/L • Fluid sequestration >6 L

Present on admission During the first 48 hours

Page 8: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

The patient has eight positive Ranson criteria

• SGOT >250 IU/L• LDH >350 IU/L • WBC count >16 000/mm3

• PaO2 <60 mm Hg

• Base deficit <-4 mEq/L• Net fluid sequestration >6 L• Calcium concentration • <8 mg/dL• Haematocrit decrease • >0 percentage points

The predicted mortality rate for a Ranson score of 8 is 60%Eachempati et al. Arch Surg 2002

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

1–2 3–4 5–6 7–8 > 8

Ranson score

Mo

rta

lity

(%

)

Figure reproduced with permission from Arch Surg

Page 9: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Would you start prophylactic antibiotics?

1. No2. Yes, with …

a. Ceftriaxone?b. Gentamicin plus metronidazole?c. Imipenem/cilastatin or meropenem?d. Ciprofloxacin plus metronidazole?e. Other?

3. Yes, plus fluconazole

Page 10: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Penetration of pancreatic tissue and pancreatic juice by antimicrobial agents

• Poor– Aminoglycosides– Vancomycin

• Variable– Penicillins– Cephalosporins

• Good– Carbapenems– Metronidazole– Quinolones – Fluconazole

Bassi et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 1994;38:830–836

Page 11: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

What is this patient’s risk of developing infection?

1. <10%2. 10%–30%3. 30%–50%4. >50%

Page 12: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Incidence of peripancreatic infection after acute pancreatitis

All episodes 3%–7%Any pancreatic necrosis 20%–70%Pancreatic necrosis >30% 15%–30%Pancreatic necrosis >50% 40%–70%

Beger et al. Gastroenterology 1986;91:433–438Beger et al. Pancreatology 2003;3:93–101Buchler et al. Ann Surg 2000;232:619–625

Page 13: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Day 14Day 7 Day 21

Should prophylaxis be given? for the entire at-risk period?

Pancreatic infections almost never occur before Day 7

The peak incidence is at Day 14

Beger et al. Gastroenterology 1986;91:433–438

99% of data

95% of data

68% of data

Page 14: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

How long would you administer antibiotic prophylaxis?

1. Would not administer prophylaxis2. 1 week3. 2 weeks4. 3 weeks5. Until ICU discharge

Should prophylaxis be administered for the entire risk period?

Page 15: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Prophylactic antibiotics for severe acute pancreatitis

First double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

• 114 patients enrolled, 76 with necrosis• Entry criteria

– C-reactive protein >150, or– Necrosis on contrast-enhanced CT, and– <72 hours from onset of pain

• Ciprofloxacin plus metronidazole vs placebo• All patients treated 14–21 days unless

converted to open-label (therapeutic) useIsenmann et al. Gastroenterology 2004;126:997

Page 16: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Results: intention-to-treat analysis (n=114)

1117Need for operation (%)

7 5Mortality (%)

2322Extra-pancreaticinfection (%)

912Infected necrosis (%)

PlaceboCiprofloxacin/metronidazole

Page 17: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Prophylactic antibiotics for severe acute pancreatitis: double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

• 100 patients with severe acute pancreatitis– Contrast-enhanced CT

• multiple peripancreatic fluid collections by non-contrast CT, plus

• C-reactive protein >120 mg/dL, or

• Multiple organ dysfunction score >2 points• Meropenem 1 g q8h vs placebo• Primary end-point

– Pancreatic/peripancreatic infection within 42 days

Dellinger et al. Ann Surg (in press)

Page 18: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Prophylactic antibiotics for severe acute pancreatitis: trial results

0.801820Mortality

0.482026Surgical intervention

0.411218Pancreatic/peripancreatic infection

p-value

Placebo %

Meropenem %Outcome

Dellinger et al. Ann Surg (in press)

Page 19: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

The downside of prolonged antibiotic prophylaxis

• Allergy• Expense• Resistance• Superinfection

Page 20: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Prophylactic antibiotics for severe acute pancreatitis

• Recovery of resistant bacteria

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

Antibiotic group Placebo group

p<0.0001

Isenmann et al. Gastroenterology 2004;126:997

Page 21: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

What antibiotic regimen was prescribed initially?

This patient was NOT started on antibiotic prophylaxis

Page 22: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

The patient’s condition improves

• Resolution of leukocytosis• Resolution of pain• Oral intake resumed

Page 23: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

The patient develops multiple organ dysfunction syndrome

• Day 16• New fever and

leukocytosis• Increased abdominal

distention• ARDS

– Low VT ventilation

– PEEP

• Renal dysfunction• What do you do now?

Page 24: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Repeat CT scan shows a large peripancreatic fluid collection

Small amount ofstill-perfused pancreas

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What action(s) should be taken now?

1. Continue to observe2. Microbiological sampling 3. Repeat CT scan with fine-needle aspiration4. Operate

Page 26: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

What specimen(s) would you collect?

1. None2. Blood3. Sputum4. Peripancreatic fluid (fine-needle aspiration)

Page 27: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Incidence of infected pancreatitis when sought by fine-needle aspiration

9889Accuracy (%)

9893Neg. pred. value (%)

10083Pos. pred. value (%)

10090Specificity (%)

9788Sensitivity (%)

> Week 1All

Page 28: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Results of culture and susceptibility testing

• Patient underwent CT-guided fine-needle aspiration– Peripancreatic fluid

• Proteus mirabilis (pan-sensitive)

• Blood– No growth

• Urine– No growth

• Sputum– No growth

Page 29: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Microbiology of infected pancreatic necrosis (%)

10Not reportedMixed

617Candida spp.

4 2Anaerobes

3626Gram-negative

4655Gram-positive

Buchler

2000

Fernandez-del Castillo

1998

Fernandez-del Castillo et al. Ann Surg 1998;228:676–684Buchler et al. Ann Surg 2000;232:619–626

Page 30: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Therapy

• Formal operative debridement and drainage• Only one operation required• Meropenem x 14 days• Choice based on tissue penetration • Dosage reduction for creatinine clearance

35 mL/min

Page 31: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Outcome

• Fever and leukocytosis resolve• Organ dysfunction resolves• Renal function improves

– Creatinine stabilises at ~2.0 mg/dL

• Patient recovers

Page 32: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Key learning points

1. Most patients (~85%) with acute pancreatitis do not develop severe disease

2. Determination of severity of illness provides prognostic information and can guide therapy

3. Antimicrobial prophylaxis does not prevent secondary infection in severe acute pancreatitis, but does increase risk of resistant pathogens if infection does occur

4. Antibiotics may be withheld until needed for therapy

Page 33: 8 Severe Acute Pancreatitis

AIM core principles

• Select the most appropriate antibiotic depending on the patient, risk factors, suspected infection and resistance

• Recognise that prior antimicrobial administration is a risk factor for the presence of resistant pathogens

• Ensure adequate containment of the infection source by removing contaminated devices and draining/debriding infectious tissue