| Literature DB >> 17352805 |
Niels A van der Gaag1, Steve M M de Castro, Erik A J Rauws, Marco J Bruno, Casper H J van Eijck, Ernst J Kuipers, Josephus J G M Gerritsen, Jan-Paul Rutten, Jan Willem Greve, Erik J Hesselink, Jean H G Klinkenbijl, Inne H M Borel Rinkes, Djamila Boerma, Bert A Bonsing, Cees J van Laarhoven, Frank J G M Kubben, Erwin van der Harst, Meindert N Sosef, Koop Bosscha, Ignace H J T de Hingh, Laurens Th de Wit, Otto M van Delden, Olivier R C Busch, Thomas M van Gulik, Patrick M M Bossuyt, Dirk J Gouma.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgery in patients with obstructive jaundice caused by a periampullary (pancreas, papilla, distal bile duct) tumor is associated with a higher risk of postoperative complications than in non-jaundiced patients. Preoperative biliary drainage was introduced in an attempt to improve the general condition and thus reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality. Early studies showed a reduction in morbidity. However, more recently the focus has shifted towards the negative effects of drainage, such as an increase of infectious complications. Whether biliary drainage should always be performed in jaundiced patients remains controversial. The randomized controlled multicenter DROP-trial (DRainage vs. Operation) was conceived to compare the outcome of a 'preoperative biliary drainage strategy' (standard strategy) with that of an 'early-surgery' strategy, with respect to the incidence of severe complications (primary-outcome measure), hospital stay, number of invasive diagnostic tests, costs, and quality of life. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17352805 PMCID: PMC1828149 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2482-7-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Figure 1DROP-study flowchart.
Severe ERCP- and surgery-related (postoperative) complications [5,28,29,35,36,38,39,43,44].
| - Acute pancreatitis | Abdominal pain and a serum concentration of pancreatic enzymes (amylase or lipase) two or more times the upper limit of normal, that required more than one night of hospitalisation | |
| - Cholangitis | Elevation in the temperature to more than 38°C, thought to have a biliary cause, without concomitant evidence of acute cholecystitis | |
| - Acute cholecystitis | No suggestive clinical or radiographic signs of acute cholecystitis before the procedure and if emergency cholecystectomy is subsequently required | |
| - Perforation | Retroperitoneal or bowel-wall perforation documented by any radiographic technique | |
| - Haemorrhage | Clinical evidence of bleeding (melena or hematemesis) with an associated decrease of at least 2 g per decilitre in the haemoglobin concentration, or the need for a blood transfusion | |
| - Stent Occlusion | Recurring obstructive jaundice with necessary stent replacement | |
| - Pancreatojejunostomy leakage | Drain output of any measurable volume of fluid on or after postoperative day 3 with an amylase content greater than 3 times the serum amylase activity, graded according to clinical course (ISGPS grade A, B, C) | |
| - Postpancreatectomy haemorrhage | Bleeding after the index operation requiring ≥ 4 units of packed cells and/or leading to relaparotomy/intervention | |
| - Delayed gastric emptying | Gastric stasis requiring nasogastric intubation for 10 days or more, or the inability to tolerate a regular (solid) diet on or before the fourteenth postoperative day | |
| - Biliary leakage | Bilirubin in abdominal drain or dehiscence found at laparotomy | |
| - Sepsis | Presence of two or more of the following: fever or hypothermia, leucocytosis or leucopenia, tachycardia, and tachypnea or a supernormal minute ventilation | |
| - Intra-abdominal abscess formation | Intra-abdominal fluid collection with positive cultures identified by ultrasonography or computed tomography, associated with persistent fever and elevations of white blood cells | |
| - Wound infection | Requiring intervention with subsequent prolonged hospital stay, otherwise considered as minor complication | |
| - Burst abdomen | ||
| - Any relaparotomy for other reasons | ||
| - Pneumonia |