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Population-based observational study of acute pancreatitis in southern England

Population-based observational study of acute pancreatitis in southern England
Population-based observational study of acute pancreatitis in southern England
INTRODUCTION Acute pancreatitis is a common surgical emergency. Identifying variations in presentation, incidence and management may assist standardisation and optimisation of care. The objective of the study was to document the current incidence management and outcomes of acute pancreatitis against international guidelines, and to assess temporal trends over the past 20 years.

METHODS A prospective four-month audit of patients with acute pancreatitis was performed across the Wessex region. The Atlanta 2012 classifications were used to define cases, severity and complications. Outcomes were recorded using validated systems and correlated against guideline standards. Case ascertainment was validated with clinical coding and hospital episode statistics data.

RESULTS A total of 283 patient admissions with acute pancreatitis were identified. Aetiology included 153 gallstones (54%),65 idiopathic (23%), 29 alcohol (10%), 9 endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (3%), 6 drug related (2%), 5 tumour (2%) and 16 other (6%). Compliance with guidelines had improved compared with our previous regional audit. Results were 6.5% mortality, 74% severity stratification, 23% idiopathic cases, 65% definitive treatment of gallstones within 2 weeks,39% computed tomography within 6–10 days of severe pancreatitis presentation and 82% severe pancreatitis critical care admission. The Atlanta 2012 severity criteria significantly correlated with critical care stay, length of stay, development of complications and mortality (2% vs 6% vs 36%, P < 0.0001).

CONCLUSIONS The incidence of acute pancreatitis in southern England has risen substantially. The Atlanta 2012 classification identifies patients with severe pancreatitis who have a high risk of fatal outcome. Acute pancreatitis management is seen to have evolved in keeping with new evidence and updated clinical guidelines.
0035-8843
487-494
Mirnezami, Alexander
b3c7aee7-46a4-404c-bfe3-f72388e0bc94
Knight, Ben
ae4aab3c-5d2b-4afc-9d6b-ff11299ebc07
Moran, Brendan
76fc3bf0-63a8-4976-8639-dd13f4cb1e43
Noble, Fergus
4f14574c-28f2-4e04-bd95-f53c7649e1fa
Branagan, Graham
ad21a645-9a02-4fdb-8c9b-649ecb5b8c58
Primrose, John
d85f3b28-24c6-475f-955b-ec457a3f9185
Pearson, Katherine
cf16076f-285a-4396-852a-422defd5a87d
West, Malcolm
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04
Curtis, Nathan
f3a3ae97-3198-4e69-a5f8-bdfc0807a871
Pucher, Phil
b24aaf53-5aa4-491c-815e-9041e64e1505
Cuttress, Ramsey
9b56a7f9-df7e-4987-b7e4-65e3798f80eb
Pugh, Sian
d7ba0abb-18db-4443-9626-58fe08b29cf9
Underwood, Tim
8e81bf60-edd2-4b0e-8324-3068c95ea1c6
Mirnezami, Alexander
b3c7aee7-46a4-404c-bfe3-f72388e0bc94
Knight, Ben
ae4aab3c-5d2b-4afc-9d6b-ff11299ebc07
Moran, Brendan
76fc3bf0-63a8-4976-8639-dd13f4cb1e43
Noble, Fergus
4f14574c-28f2-4e04-bd95-f53c7649e1fa
Branagan, Graham
ad21a645-9a02-4fdb-8c9b-649ecb5b8c58
Primrose, John
d85f3b28-24c6-475f-955b-ec457a3f9185
Pearson, Katherine
cf16076f-285a-4396-852a-422defd5a87d
West, Malcolm
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04
Curtis, Nathan
f3a3ae97-3198-4e69-a5f8-bdfc0807a871
Pucher, Phil
b24aaf53-5aa4-491c-815e-9041e64e1505
Cuttress, Ramsey
9b56a7f9-df7e-4987-b7e4-65e3798f80eb
Pugh, Sian
d7ba0abb-18db-4443-9626-58fe08b29cf9
Underwood, Tim
8e81bf60-edd2-4b0e-8324-3068c95ea1c6

Mirnezami, Alexander, Knight, Ben, Moran, Brendan, Noble, Fergus, Branagan, Graham, Primrose, John, Pearson, Katherine, West, Malcolm, Curtis, Nathan, Pucher, Phil, Cuttress, Ramsey, Pugh, Sian and Underwood, Tim (2019) Population-based observational study of acute pancreatitis in southern England. Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England, 101 (7), 487-494. (doi:10.1308/rcsann.2019.0055).

Record type: Article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Acute pancreatitis is a common surgical emergency. Identifying variations in presentation, incidence and management may assist standardisation and optimisation of care. The objective of the study was to document the current incidence management and outcomes of acute pancreatitis against international guidelines, and to assess temporal trends over the past 20 years.

METHODS A prospective four-month audit of patients with acute pancreatitis was performed across the Wessex region. The Atlanta 2012 classifications were used to define cases, severity and complications. Outcomes were recorded using validated systems and correlated against guideline standards. Case ascertainment was validated with clinical coding and hospital episode statistics data.

RESULTS A total of 283 patient admissions with acute pancreatitis were identified. Aetiology included 153 gallstones (54%),65 idiopathic (23%), 29 alcohol (10%), 9 endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (3%), 6 drug related (2%), 5 tumour (2%) and 16 other (6%). Compliance with guidelines had improved compared with our previous regional audit. Results were 6.5% mortality, 74% severity stratification, 23% idiopathic cases, 65% definitive treatment of gallstones within 2 weeks,39% computed tomography within 6–10 days of severe pancreatitis presentation and 82% severe pancreatitis critical care admission. The Atlanta 2012 severity criteria significantly correlated with critical care stay, length of stay, development of complications and mortality (2% vs 6% vs 36%, P < 0.0001).

CONCLUSIONS The incidence of acute pancreatitis in southern England has risen substantially. The Atlanta 2012 classification identifies patients with severe pancreatitis who have a high risk of fatal outcome. Acute pancreatitis management is seen to have evolved in keeping with new evidence and updated clinical guidelines.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 February 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 July 2019
Published date: September 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 432492
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432492
ISSN: 0035-8843
PURE UUID: 699678a6-d402-4915-af63-4707d85914c2
ORCID for John Primrose: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2069-7605
ORCID for Malcolm West: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0345-5356
ORCID for Tim Underwood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9455-2188

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Jul 2019 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:40

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Contributors

Author: Ben Knight
Author: Brendan Moran
Author: Fergus Noble
Author: Graham Branagan
Author: John Primrose ORCID iD
Author: Katherine Pearson
Author: Malcolm West ORCID iD
Author: Nathan Curtis
Author: Phil Pucher
Author: Ramsey Cuttress
Author: Sian Pugh
Author: Tim Underwood ORCID iD

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