| Literature DB >> 28942590 |
S T van Dijk1, S J Rottier2, A A W van Geloven2, M A Boermeester3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Since the treatment of acute diverticulitis has become more conservative over the last years, knowledge of conservative treatment strategies is increasingly important. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Acute diverticulitis; Antibiotics; Conservative treatment; Uncomplicated
Year: 2017 PMID: 28942590 PMCID: PMC5610668 DOI: 10.1007/s11908-017-0600-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Infect Dis Rep ISSN: 1523-3847 Impact factor: 3.725
Acute diverticulitis staging according to the modified Hinchey classification [8]
| Stage | Definition |
|---|---|
| 1a | Confined pericolic inflammation or phlegmon |
| 1b | Pericolic or mesocolic abscess |
| 2 | Pelvic, distant intra-abdominal or retro-peritoneal abscess |
| 3 | Purulent peritonitis |
| 4 | Fecal peritonitis |
Summary of current evidence on the conservative treatment of acute diverticulitis
| Intervention or group | Conclusion | Evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment strategies in acute diverticulitis | Diet | Unrestricted diet seems justified | Some low quality and observational evidence shows the safety of an unrestricted diet, whereas no evidence in favor of dietary restrictions exists. |
| Bed rest | No place for bed rest in the treatment of acute diverticulitis | Beneficial effects have never been studied nor proven. | |
| Antibiotics in uncomplicated diverticulitis | Omitting antibiotics is safe in uncomplicated diverticulitis patients. | Two RCT’s show that omitting antibiotics is without significant short-term and mid-term repercussions. | |
| Outpatient treatment | Safe for uncomplicated diverticulitis patients without serious comorbidity or immunocompromised state and with an adequate social network | One RCT and an observational study show no increased readmission rate. Readmissions are predominantly because of vomiting or persistent pain instead of diverticular complications. | |
| Pericolic extraluminal air | Initial conservative approach is advocated in isolated pericolic extraluminal air patients. | Although slightly higher than for uncomplicated diverticulitis patients in literature, rates of need for emergency surgery are relatively low in observational studies. | |
| Altered disease course in patient subgroups | Young patients | No more virulent or recurrent disease course compared to elderly patients | Observational studies show comparable proportions of complicated diverticulitis. Studies that take follow-up duration into account, have not found an association between recurrent diverticulitis and age. |
| Immuno-compromised patients | Immunosuppressive medication is associated with higher risk of complicated diverticulitis; diabetes mellitus is not. | Observational studies show higher risks of complicated diverticulitis in post-transplant patients or patients on steroids. Studies with diabetic patients report conflicting results. | |
| Patients with medication | Patients on NSAIDs or opioids are at higher risk of complicated diverticulitis. | Mainly case-control studies show higher risks of complicated diverticulitis in patients on NSAIDs or opioids. The effect of start or cessation of these drugs at the time of diverticulitis presentation has not been studied. | |
| Pharmacological prevention of recurrent diverticulitis | Rifaximin | Insufficient evidence to conclude on efficacy | Two observational studies comparing rifaximin with mesalazine show conflicting results. |
| Mesalazine | No beneficial effect on preventing recurrent diverticulitis | Four placebo-controlled RCTs show no differences in rates of recurrent diverticulitis between groups. | |
| Probiotics | Insufficient evidence to conclude on efficacy | One RCT comparing placebo with combined mesalazine and probiotics treatment shows no difference in recurrence rates. |