| Literature DB >> 22825491 |
Seiki Kiriyama1, Tadahiro Takada, Steven M Strasberg, Joseph S Solomkin, Toshihiko Mayumi, Henry A Pitt, Dirk J Gouma, O James Garden, Markus W Büchler, Masamichi Yokoe, Yasutoshi Kimura, Toshio Tsuyuguchi, Takao Itoi, Masahiro Yoshida, Fumihiko Miura, Yuichi Yamashita, Kohji Okamoto, Toshifumi Gabata, Jiro Hata, Ryota Higuchi, John A Windsor, Philippus C Bornman, Sheung-Tat Fan, Harijt Singh, Eduardo de Santibanes, Harumi Gomi, Shinya Kusachi, Atsuhiko Murata, Xiao-Ping Chen, Palepu Jagannath, Sunggyu Lee, Robert Padbury, Miin-Fu Chen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Tokyo Guidelines for the management of acute cholangitis and cholecystitis were published in 2007 (TG07) and have been widely cited in the world literature. Because of new information that has been published since 2007, we organized the Tokyo Guidelines Revision Committee to conduct a multicenter analysis to develop the updated Tokyo Guidelines (TG13). METHODS/MATERIALS: We retrospectively analyzed 1,432 biliary disease cases where acute cholangitis was suspected. The cases were collected from multiple tertiary care centers in Japan. The 'gold standard' for acute cholangitis in this study was that one of the three following conditions was present: (1) purulent bile was observed; (2) clinical remission following bile duct drainage; or (3) remission was achieved by antibacterial therapy alone, in patients in whom the only site of infection was the biliary tree. Comparisons were made for the validity of each diagnostic criterion among TG13, TG07 and Charcot's triad.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22825491 PMCID: PMC3429782 DOI: 10.1007/s00534-012-0537-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci ISSN: 1868-6974 Impact factor: 7.027
Clinical characteristics of patients
| Acute cholangitis ( | Other disease ( | |
|---|---|---|
Etiology; choledocholithiasis ( malignant tumor ( | Choledocholithiasis ( obstructive jaundice caused by malignant tumor ( acute cholecystitis ( | |
| Age | 71.7 ± 11.8 | 68.5 ± 12.3 |
Sex (male:female) | 490:304 | 307:331 |
| Charcot triad | 147 (18.5 %) | 26 (4.1 %) |
| Abdominal pain | 435 (54.8 %) | 309 (48.4 %) |
Presence of purulent biliary leakage
Clinical remission due to bile duct drainage
Remission achieved by antimicrobial therapy alone in patients in whom the only site of infection was the biliary tree
aThe ‘Gold Standard’ for acute cholangitis in this study was that one of the following three conditions was present
Prognostic factors in acute cholangitis
| Prognostic factor | Positive value | References |
|---|---|---|
| Hyperbilirubinemia | >2 mg/dL | [ |
| >2.2 mg/dL | [ | |
| >2.93 mg/dL | [ | |
| >4 mg/dL | [ | |
| >5.26 mg/dL | [ | |
| >5.56 mg/dL | [ | |
| >8.1 mg/dL, >9.2 mg/dL | [ | |
| >9.1 mg/dL | [ | |
| >10 mg/dL | [ | |
| Hypoalbuminemia | <3.0 g/dL | [ |
| Acute renal failure | BUN (>20–>64 mg/dL) Creatinine (>1.5–>2.0 mg/dL) | [ |
| Shock | [ | |
| Reduced platelet count | <1,00,000–<1,50,000/mm3 | [ |
| Endotoxemia/bacteremia | [ | |
| High fever | >38 °C | [ |
| >39 °C | [ | |
| >40 °C | [ | |
| Medical comorbidity | [ | |
| Elderly patient | ≥50 years old | [ |
| ≥60 years old | [ | |
| ≥70 years old | [ | |
| ≥75 years old | [ | |
| Malignancy as etiology | [ | |
| Prolonged prothrombin time | ≤14 s | [ |
| ≤15 s | [ | |
| Leukocytosis | ≤12,000 | [ |
| ≤20,000 | [ | |
| Current smoking | Yes | [ |
Retrospective comparison of various diagnostic criteria of acute cholangitis in a multicenter study in Japan
| Charcot’s triad (%) | TG07 (%) | The first draft criteria (with abdominal pain and history of biliary disease) (%) | TG13 (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 26.4 | 82.6 | 95.1 | 91.8 |
| Specificity | 95.9 | 79.8 | 66.3 | 77.7 |
| Positive rate in acute cholecystitis | 11.9 | 15.5 | 38.8 | 5.9 |
TG13 Diagnostic criteria for acute cholangitis
| A. Systemic inflammation | ||||
| A-1. Fever and/or shaking chills | ||||
| A-2. Laboratory data: evidence of inflammatory response | ||||
| B. Cholestasis | ||||
| B-1. Jaundice | ||||
| B-2. Laboratory data: abnormal liver function tests | ||||
| C. Imaging | ||||
C-1. Biliary dilatation C-2. Evidence of the etiology on imaging (stricture, stone, stent, etc.) | ||||
| Suspected diagnosis: one item in A + one item in either B or C | ||||
| Definite diagnosis: one item in A, one item in B and one item in C | ||||
| A-2 Abnormal white blood cell counts, increase of serum C-reactive protein levels, and other changes indicating inflammation | ||||
| B-2 Increased serum ALP, r-GTP (GGT), AST, and ALT levels | ||||
| Threshholds | ||||
| A-1 | Fever | BT >38 °C | ||
| A-2 | Evidence of inflammatory response | WBC (×1,000/μL) | <4, or >10 | |
| CRP (mg/dL) | ≧1 | |||
| B-1 | Jaundice | T-Bil ≧2 (mg/dL) | ||
| B-2 | Abnormal liver function tests | ALP (IU) | >1.5 × STD* | |
| γGTP (IU) | >1.5 × STD* | |||
| AST (IU) | >1.5 × STD* | |||
| ALT (IU) | >1.5 × STD* | |||
Other factors which are helpful in diagnosis of acute cholangitis include abdominal pain (Right upper quadrant (RUQ) or upper abdominal) and a history of biliary disease such as gallstones, previous biliary procedures, and placement of a biliary stent
In acute hepatitis, marked systematic inflammatory response is observed infrequently. Virological and serological tests are required when differential diagnosis is difficult
ALP Alkaline phosphatase, r-GTP (GGT) r-glutamyltransferase,
AST aspartate aminotransferase, ALT alanine aminotransferase
* STD upper limit of normal value
Comparisons of various cut-offs for laboratory testing results for the diagnosis of acute cholangitis in Japan
| Thresholds for positivity of test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adoption | Limit of this test (low) | Limit of this test (high) | ||
| T-Bil (mg/dL) | ≧2 | Same | Same | |
| ALP (IU) | >1.5 × STD | ≧400 | ≧500 | |
| γGTP (IU) | >1.5 × STD | ≧100 | ≧150 | |
| AST (IU) | >1.5 × STD | ≧50 | ≧100 | |
| ALT (IU) | >1.5 × STD | ≧50 | ≧100 | |
| WBC (×1,000/μL) | <4, or >10 | Same | Same | |
| CRP (mg/dL) | ≧1 | Same | Same | |
| BT | >38 °C | Same | Same | |
| Sensitivity | 91.8 % | 93.0 % | 92.7 % | |
| Specificity | 77.7 % | 77.9 % | 77.9 % | |
| Positive rate in acute cholecystitis ( | 5.9 % | 9.1 % | 8.7 % | |
STD upper limit of normal value
Timing of biliary drainage among patients with acute cholangitis diagnosed with TG07—multicenter analysis of acute cholangitis for revision of TG07 severity criteria of acute cholangitis
| Timing of drainage/treatment for etiology | Grade III | Grade II | Grade I | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Within 24 h | 41 | 258 (Grade II or I) | 297 | |
| 24–48 h | 9 | 54 | 0 | 63 |
| After 48 h | 20 | 130 | 12 | 162 |
| Drainage (−) | 2 | 3 | 96 | 101 |
| Total | 72 (11.6 %) | 551 (88.4 %) (Grade II or I) | 623 | |
TG13 Severity assessment criteria for acute cholangitis
| Grade III (Severe) acute cholangitis | |
| ‘Grade III’ acute cholangitis is defined as acute cholangitis that is associated with the onset of dysfunction at least in any one of the following organs/systems | |
| 1. Cardiovascular dysfunction | Hypotension requiring dopamine ≥5 μg/kg per min, or any dose of norepinephrine |
| 2. Neurological dysfunction | Disturbance of consciousness |
| 3. Respiratory dysfunction | PaO2/FiO2 ratio <300 |
| 4. Renal dysfunction | Oliguria, serum creatinine >2.0 mg/dL |
| 5. Hepatic dysfunction | PT-INR >1.5 |
| 6. Hematological dysfunction | Platelet count <1,00,000/mm3 |
| Grade II (moderate) acute cholangitis | |
| ‘Grade II’ acute cholangitis is associated with any two of the following conditions: | |
| 1. Abnormal WBC count (>12,000/mm3, <4,000/mm3) | |
| 2. High fever (≥39 °C) | |
| 3. Age (≥75 years) | |
| 4. Hyperbilirubinemia (total bilirubin ≥5 mg/dL) | |
| 5. Hypoalbuminemia (<STD × 0.7) | |
| Grade I (mild) acute cholangitis | |
| ‘Grade I’ acute cholangitis does not meet the criteria of ‘Grade III (severe)’ or ‘Grade II (moderate)’ acute cholangitis at initial diagnosis | |
Early diagnosis, early biliary drainage and/or treatment for etiology, and antimicrobial administration are fundamental treatment for acute cholangitis classified not only ‘Grade III (severe)’ and ‘Grade II (moderate)’ but also Grade I (mild)
Therefore, it is recommended that patients with acute cholangitis who do not respond to the initial medical treatment (general supportive care and antimicrobial therapy) undergo early biliary drainage or treatment for etiology
STD lower limit of normal value
Timing of biliary drainage among patients with acute cholangitis diagnosed with TG13—multicenter analysis of acute cholangitis for revision of TG07 Severity assessment criteria for acute cholangitis
| Timing of drainage/treatment for etiology | Grade III | Grade II | Grade I | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Within 24 h | 41 | 116 | 140 (135) | 297 |
| 24–48 h | 9 | 13 | 41 (41) | 63 |
| After 48 h | 20 | 48 | 94 | 162 |
| Drainage (−) | 2 | 39 | 60 | 101 |
| Total | 72 (11.6 %) | 216 (34.7 %) | 335 (53.8 %) | 623 |
() indicates the number of cases that have early drainage and treatment of etiology
TG13 Severity assessment criteria and Charcot’s triad
| Severity grading of TG13 | Charcot’s triad | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes ( | No ( | |
| Grade III | 13 (11.8 %) | 59 (11.5 %) |
| Grade II | 52 (47.3 %) | 164 (32.0 %) |
| Grade I | 45 (40.9 %) | 290 (56.5 %) |