Can High Risk Patients with Cholangitis Be Identified?
Author(s) -
J. M. Ham
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
hpb surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.561
H-Index - 26
eISSN - 1607-8462
pISSN - 0894-8569
DOI - 10.1155/1990/36580
Subject(s) - medicine , general surgery
Gigot JF, Leese T, Dereme T, Coutinho J, Castaing D and Bismuth H. Acute Cholangitis Multivariate Analysis of Risk Factors. Ann Surg 1989; 209 No. 4:435438. In order to identify risk factors in patients with acute cholangitis, 140 clinical, biochemical, etiologic and pathologic variables of 449 attacks of acute cholangitis seen in one center over a 20-year period were analyzed. Simple regression revealed 24 factors with prognostic significance but multivariate analysis detected only seven factors with independent significance in predicting mortality (acute renal failure, cholangitis associated with liver abscesses or liver cirrhosis, cholangitis secondary to high malignant biliary strictures or after percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography, female gender, and age). When the presence of each of these factors is weighted proportional to its coefficient of regression, patients with cholangitis could be scored on a scale of 0-27. A score of seven was clinically the most useful cut off388 attacks of cholangitis associated with a score of < 7 had a mortality rate of only 1.8%, whereas 61 attacks associated with a score 7 had a mortality rate of 49%,. The value of this scoring system needs to be confirmed in prospective studies, but it may prove useful, for example, in selecting a group of high-risk patients for urgent biliary decompression in an attempt to reduce the mortality associated with this pathology.
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