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Timing of antibiotic prophylaxis in acute pancreatitis: a controlled randomized study with meropenem.

Author(s): Manes G, Uomo I, Menchise A, Rabitti PG, Ferrara EC, Uomo G

Affiliation(s): Department of Gastroenterology, L. Sacco University Hospital, Milano, Italy.

Publication date & source: 2006-06, Am J Gastroenterol., 101(6):1348-53.

Publication type: Randomized Controlled Trial

OBJECTIVES: Antibiotic prophylaxis improves the outcome of acute pancreatitis. Since bacterial translocation from the gut occurs in the first h of disease, early therapy is likely to achieve the maximal effect. The study compares early antibiotic treatment with treatment started after the demonstration of pancreatic necrosis. METHODS: Two hundred fifteen patients with pancreatitis were randomized to either group A (N=108), who started antibiotic therapy (meropenem 500 mg t.i.d.) at admission, or group B (N=107), who received antibiotics after the demonstration of necrosis at computed tomography (CT). CT was performed in both groups after at least 48 hr of hospitalization. The clinical course of disease was compared in the two groups. RESULTS: Thirty patients in group A and 29 in B showed necrosis on CT. The two groups were similar in demographics and characteristics of disease. Antibiotic treatment was started after 4.56+/-1.2 days from hospitalization in group B and after 1.07+/-0.6 days in A. Pancreatic infection occurred in four patients in group A (13.3%) and in nine in B (31%) (p=0.1). Extrapancreatic infection occurred in 16.6% of patients in group A and in 44.8% in B (p<0.05). Need for surgery and length of hospitalization were also higher in group B. Mortality rates were similar in the two groups, but, 3 of 4 patients with infected necrosis in group A and only 2 of 9 in group B died. CONCLUSIONS: Early antibiotic treatment is associated with a significant improvement in the prognosis of necrotizing acute pancreatitis (AP), because of a reduction in the occurrence of septic complications.

Page last updated: 2006-11-04

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