Literature DB >> 27482766

Prevalence, Clinical Profile, and Outcome of Ascitic Fluid Infection in Children With Liver Disease.

Anshu Srivastava1, Rohan Malik, Rishi Bolia, Surender K Yachha, Ujjal Poddar.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Pediatric literature on spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is limited. We evaluated the prevalence, subtypes, clinical profile, and effect on outcome of ascitic fluid infection (AFI) in children with liver disease.
METHODS: Children with liver disease-related ascites and subjected to paracentesis were classified as no-AFI and AFI (SBP, culture-negative neutrocytic ascites [CNNA], and monomicrobial non-neutrocytic bacterascites). Clinical and laboratory parameters, in-hospital mortality, and outcome in follow-up were noted.
RESULTS: Two hundred sixty-two children (163 boys; age 84 [1-240] months, chronic liver disease [CLD, n = 173], non-CLD [n = 89]) were enrolled. A total of 28.6% (n = 75) had SBP/CNNA, more common in CLD than non-CLD (55/173 [31.7%] vs 20/89 [22.4%]; P = 0.1). A total of 50.6% SBP/CNNA cases were symptomatic for AFI. Gram-negative bacilli were isolated from 70% SBP cases. Twenty-five percent (18/72) CLD children with AFI had a poor hospital outcome, with INR, Child-Pugh score and gastrointestinal bleeding predicting outcome on multivariate analysis. Patients with CLD with SBP had higher in-hospital mortality (10/20 vs 5/35; P = 0.01) than those with CNNA, but similar Child-Pugh score (12[7-15] vs 11[7-14]; P = 0.1), recurrence of AFI (3/9 vs 6/24; P = 0.6) and mortality in follow-up (22.2% vs 25%; P = 0.1). Patients with CLD with SBP/CNNA had higher mortality over 1 year follow-up than no-AFI (24.2% [8/33] vs 12.2% [7/57]; P = 0.1) but the difference was not significant.
CONCLUSIONS: A total of 28.6% children with liver disease-related ascites have SBP/CNNA; 50% are symptomatic. Patients with CLD with SBP/CNNA have a mortality of 24% over 1year follow-up. CLD with SBP is similar to CNNA except for higher in-hospital mortality.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 27482766     DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000001348

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr        ISSN: 0277-2116            Impact factor:   2.839


  3 in total

Review 1.  Pediatric acute viral hepatitis with atypical variants: Clinical dilemmas and natural history.

Authors:  Moinak Sen Sarma; Aathira Ravindranath
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2022-05-27

2.  An evaluation of ascitic calprotectin for diagnosis of ascitic fluid infection in children with cirrhosis.

Authors:  Naser Honar; Najmeh Nezamabadipour; Seyed Mohsen Dehghani; Mahmood Haghighat; Mohammad Hadi Imanieh; Maryam Ataollahi; Nader Shakibazad; Hazhir Javaherizadeh
Journal:  BMC Pediatr       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 2.567

3.  Routine analysis of ascitic fluid for evidence of infection in children with chronic liver disease: Is it mandatory?

Authors:  Carolyne Ghobrial; Engy Adel Mogahed; Hanaa El-Karaksy
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-10-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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