| Literature DB >> 33153472 |
Michele Pisano1, Niccolò Allievi2, Kurinchi Gurusamy3, Giuseppe Borzellino4, Stefania Cimbanassi5, Djamila Boerna6, Federico Coccolini7, Andrea Tufo8, Marcello Di Martino9, Jeffrey Leung3, Massimo Sartelli10, Marco Ceresoli11, Ronald V Maier12, Elia Poiasina2, Nicola De Angelis13, Stefano Magnone2, Paola Fugazzola14, Ciro Paolillo15, Raul Coimbra16, Salomone Di Saverio17, Belinda De Simone18, Dieter G Weber19, Boris E Sakakushev20, Alessandro Lucianetti2, Andrew W Kirkpatrick21, Gustavo P Fraga22, Imitaz Wani23, Walter L Biffl24, Osvaldo Chiara5, Fikri Abu-Zidan25, Ernest E Moore26, Ari Leppäniemi27, Yoram Kluger28, Fausto Catena29, Luca Ansaloni14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute calculus cholecystitis (ACC) has a high incidence in the general population. The presence of several areas of uncertainty, along with the availability of new evidence, prompted the current update of the 2016 WSES (World Society of Emergency Surgery) Guidelines on ACC.Entities:
Keywords: Acute cholecystitis; Antibiotics; Early and delayed cholecystectomy; Gallbladder Drainage; Guidelines; High-risk patients; Surgery
Year: 2020 PMID: 33153472 PMCID: PMC7643471 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-020-00336-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Sections/topics, key questions and key words
| Section/topic | Key questions | Key words |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Diagnosis of Acute Calculus Cholecystitis | Which is the most reliable approach for the diagnosis of ACC? Which initial imaging technique should be used in case of a suspected diagnosis of ACC? Which is the role of other imaging techniques (e.g. Hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid—HIDA scan, abdominal computed tomography—CT scan and magnetic resonance) in the diagnosis of ACC? | Acute calculus cholecystitis Diagnosis, Ultrasound, Gallstones disease diagnosis |
| 2. Associated common bile duct stones (CBDS) | Are elevated LFTs or bilirubin sufficient for the diagnosis of CBDS in patients with ACC? Which imaging features are predictive of CBDS in patients with ACC? Which tests should be performed to assess the risk of CBDS in patients with ACC? Which is the best tool to stratify the risk for CBDS in patients with ACC? Which actions are warranted in patients with ACC and at moderate for CBDS? Which actions are warranted in patients with ACC and at high risk for CBDS? Which is the appropriate treatment of CBDS in patients with ACC? | Common bile duct stone; choledocholithiasis; endoscopic ultrasound, MRCP, ERCP |
| 3. Surgical treatment of acute calculus cholecystitis | Which is the preferred first line of treatment for patients with ACC? When should laparoscopic cholecystectomy be avoided in patients with ACC? Is laparoscopic cholecystectomy safe and feasible for patients with ACC who have liver cirrhosis, who are older than 80 years and who are pregnant? Which surgical strategies should be adopted in case of difficult anatomic identification during cholecystectomy for ACC? When should conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy be considered in patients with ACC? | Acute calculus cholecystitis, Surgery, Laparoscopy, Laparotomy, Cholecystectomy, Partial cholecystectomy, Subtotal cholecystectomy, Cirrhosis, Pregnancy |
| 4. Timing of cholecystectomy in people with acute calculus cholecystitis | Which is the optimal timing for laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients with ACC? | Acute calculus cholecystitis, acute cholecystitis |
| 5.Risk prediction in patients with acute calculus cholecystitis | How can the prognosis and surgical risk be assessed for patients with ACC? | Acute calculus cholecystitis, Gallstone disease, Surgical risk score, High risk patient, old patient, PPossum score, Apache score |
| 6. Alternative treatment for patients who are not suitable for surgery: non-operative management and gallbladder drainage techniques | When should Non-Operative Management (NOM) be considered for patients with ACC? Which is the first-choice treatment for ACC in high risk patients? Which is the role of gallbladder drainage in patients with ACC who are not suitable for surgery? Should delayed cholecystectomy be offered to patients with ACC after the reduction of perioperative risk? Can endoscopic gallbladder drainage be considered an alternative to PTGBD in patients with ACC who are not suitable for surgery? Which is the role of endoscopic transmural ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) in patients with ACC who are not suitable for surgery? | Gallstones Dissolution, No-surgery gallstones, Extra-corporeal shock wave lithotripsy, Acute calculus cholecystitis, Gallstone disease, Management Gallstones, Endoscopy, Gallstone removal, Observation cholecystitis, Non operative management cholecystitis, Gallbladder drainage Percutaneous gallbladder drainage, Cholecystostomy, High Risk Patient, Stent |
| 7. Antibiotic treatment on acute calculus cholecystitis | Which is the optimal antibiotic treatment for patients with uncomplicated ACC? Which is the optimal antibiotic treatment for patients with complicated ACC? Which is the role of microbiological cultures and sensitivities in patients with ACC? | Antibiotics, Acute calculus cholecystitis, Gallstone disease, Management Gallstones |
Fig. 12020 WSES Flowchart for the management of patients with acute calcolus cholecystitis
Risk factors and classification of risk for CBDS (modified from Maple et al. 2010)
| Very strong | Evidence of CBDS stone at the abdominal ultrasound |
| Ascending cholangitis | |
| Strong | Common bile duct diameter > 6 mm (with gallbladder in situ) |
| Total serum bilirubin level > 1.8 mg/dl | |
| Moderate | Abnormal liver biochemical test other than bilirubin |
| Age older than 55 years | |
| Clinical gallstone pancreatitis | |
| Risk class for choledocolithiasis | |
| High | Presence of any very strong |
| Low | No predictors present |
| Intermediate | All other patients |
Timing of cholecystectomy in people with ACC
| Study name | Timing of surgery in early group | Number of participants in early group | Timing of surgery in intermediate or delayed group | Number of participants in intermediate or delayed group | Risk of biasa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Davila 1999 (1) | < 4 days after diagnosis | 27 | 2 months after discharge | 36 | Unclear |
| Gul 2013 (2) | < 72 h after hospital admission | 30 | 6 to 12 weeks after initial conservative treatment | 30 | High |
| Gutt 2013 (3) | < 24 h after hospital admission | 304 | 7 to 45 days after hospital admission2 | 314 | Low |
| Johansson 2003 (4) | < 7 days of diagnosis | 74 | 6 to 8 weeks after discharge | 71 | Low |
| Kolla 2004 (5) | < 24 h after randomisation | 20 | 6 to 12 weeks after the acute episode subsides | 20 | Low |
| Lai 1998 (6) | < 24 h after randomisation | 53 | 6 to 8 weeks after the acute episode subsides | 51 | Low |
| Lo 1998 (7) | < 72 h after admission | 45 | 8 to 12 weeks after discharge | 41 | High |
| Macafee 2009 (8) | < 72 h after recruitment | Not stated | 3 months after discharge | Not stated | High |
| Mustafa 2016 (9) | < 48 to 72 h of diagnosis | 105 | 6 to 12 weeks after initial attack | 105 | High |
| Ozkardes 2014 (10) | < 24 h of admission | 30 | 6 to 8 weeks after initial treatment | 30 | High |
| Rajcok 2016 (11) | < 72 h after occurrence of symptoms | 32 | 6 to 8 weeks after acute cholecystitis | 32 | High |
| Roulin 2016 (12) | During day as soon as possible | 42 | 6 weeks after initial diagnosis | 44 | High |
| Saber 2014 (13) | < 72 h of duration of symptoms | 60 | 6 to 8 weeks from onset of symptoms | 60 | High |
| Verma 2013 (14) | < 72 h of admission | 30 | 6 to 8 weeks from onset of symptoms | 30 | High |
| Yadav 2009 (15) | As soon as possible | 25 | 6 to 8 weeks after discharge | 25 | High |
| Zahur 2014 (16) | < 24 to 48 h after hospital admission | 47 | 6 to 8 weeks after initial conservative treatment | 41 | High |
Main reasons for unclear or high risk of bias
High risk of bias: at least one of random sequence generation, allocation concealment, missing outcome bias or selective outcome reporting bias was classified as high risk of bias
Unclear risk of bias: at least one of random sequence generation, allocation concealment, missing outcome bias or selective outcome reporting bias was classified as unclear risk of bias without any of the domains being classified as high risk of bias
aAll studies were at high risk of bias due to lack of blinding. The risk of bias classification stated here is for the remaining domains
bThis was the only study in which intermediate laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed; delayed laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed in the remaining studies
Antimicrobial regimens suggested for ACC