Gallstone Pancreatitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Early Versus Delayed Surgery for Gallstone Pancreatitis: A Prospective Randomized
While there exists consensus among surgeons that patients with gallstone pancreatitis should undergo cholecystectomy to prevent recurrence, the precise timing of laparoscopic cholecystectomy for mild to moderate disease remains controversial. We hypothesize that laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed within 48 hours of admission, regardless of resolution of abdominal pain or abnormal laboratory values, will result in a shorter hospital stay.
Acute pancreatitis is a common diagnosis worldwide, with more than 220,000 cases reported
annually in the United States alone. The leading etiology is gallstones.1 Gallstone
pancreatitis is thought to occur due to transient obstruction of the common channel that
drains both the biliary and pancreatic ducts, resulting in inflammation of the pancreas. The
pancreatitis that ensues is usually mild and self-limited and the treatment is initially
supportive with subsequent laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC). However, a small subgroup of
patients develop severe pancreatitis and/or concomitant cholangitis. When the latter is
present, ERC and sphincterotomy with stone extraction as indicated are typically performed.
While there is a clear consensus that patients who present with gallstone pancreatitis
should undergo cholecystectomy to prevent recurrence, precise timing of surgery remains
controversial. In patients with severe pancreatitis (Ranson's > 3), there is consensus that
surgery is delayed until the pancreatitis has resolved because early operation is associated
with a higher complication rate. 2 However, despite more than 30 years of debate in the
surgical literature, the optimal timing of surgery in mild to moderate pancreatitis
(Ranson's ≤ 3) remains unclear. With recurrence rates for gallstone pancreatitis reported as
high as 63%3 and with some of the repeat attacks occurring within two weeks of initial index
presentation1, most investigators have recommended cholecystectomy during the initial
hospitalization.4,5 Still, the actual timing of surgery during the initial index
hospitalization is unsettled. In practice, surgeons often delay surgery until there is
evidence of complete resolution of the inflammatory process, as evidenced by absence of
abdominal pain and normalization of liver functional tests and pancreatic enzymes.6
Unfortunately, this strategy may result in prolongation of hospitalization without any
proven benefit.
A previous prospective, non-randomized study from our institution suggested that early
cholecystectomy could safely be performed within 48 hours of admission in patients with mild
to moderate pancreatitis, regardless of resolution of abdominal pain and abnormal laboratory
values. In this study, when compared to a retrospective control group in which surgery was
delayed until there was resolution of clinical and laboratory parameters, hospital stay was
significantly reduced from a median of 7 days to 4 days, without additional complications.7
In order to address the optimal timing of surgery in a more definite fashion, a prospective
randomized study was performed in which patients with mild to moderate gallstone
pancreatitis were allocated to either an early group (surgery within 48 hours of
presentation) or a control group (surgery after resolution of abdominal pain and
normalization of laboratory values) and assessed overall outcomes.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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