Antibiotic Prophylaxis of Cholangitis Complicating Endoscopic Treatment of Biliary Obstruction
Špičák J., Štirand P., Zavoral M., Keil R., Závada F., Drábek J.:
Klinika hepatogastroenterologie, IKEM, Praha II. interní oddělení ÚVN, Praha Interní klinika, 2. LF UK, Praha |
|
Summary:
Objective: Cholangitis is, after haemorrhage and pancreatitis, the most frequent complication of ERCP with
a relatively high lethality. The objective of the study was to evaluate the importance of antibiotic prophylaxis
on the development of cholangitis in exclusively endoscopic treatment of biliary obstruction, assessment of the
effect of antibiotic prophylaxis on bacteriaemia, assessment of the bacterial contamination of bile and evalua-
tion of complications in general.
Methods and patients: The suthors included in the prospective multicentre controlled study patients with
signs of biliary obstruction where treatment of bilary obstruction was successful after a single session. Com-
plications were followed up also in the other patients. To the treated group Amoksiklav in amounts of 2.4 g
was administered.
Results: The study comprised a total of 276 patients and 244 protocols were evaluated. The most frequent
finding was choledocholithiasis followed by stenoses of the bilary pathways and stenosis of the papilla of
Vater (109, 49, 36 patients).
The authors recorded a total of 51 complications: 20 times haemorrhage from the papilla of Vater, 22 cases of
acute pancreatitis and 8 of cholangitis. Two patients died: one after haemorrhage from the papilla of Vater
and another one after perforation of the duodenum, haemorrhage and pancreatitis.
The controlled trial comprised 202 patients. In the antibiotic groups haemorrhage was developed by 5,
pancreatitis by 6 and cholangitis by 4 patients. In the control group haemorrhage in 8, pancreatitis in 10 and
cholangitis in 3 patients, the differences between the two groups were not significant. The haemoculture was
positive in 18 of 73 patients in the antibiotic group and in 24 of 84 patients in the control group. The most frequently detected bacteria were Staphylococcus epidermidis, Escherchia coli, Streptococcus viridans and
Klebsiella spuriae. The bacteriological finding in bile was positive in 28 of 67 examined patients in the
antibiotic group and in 50 of 78 patients in the control group. The most frequently detected bacteria were
Escherichia coli, Streptococcus viridans, Klebsiella spuriae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
The mean bilirubin value in 7 patients with complicating cholangitis was 131 (70–350) mmol/l, the mean
bilirubin value in the remainder was 78 (5–350) mmol/l, and this difference was statistically significant.
Conclusion: Antibiotic therapy before therapeutic ERCP does not reduce the risk of complicating cholangitis
and did not influence the bacteriaemia. Antibiotic administration before ERCP in case of biliary obstruction to
prevent cholangitis is therefore not justified. The bacteriological profile of bile is consistent with published
data. The presented conclusions should markedly reduce the total costs for encdoscopic treatment of biliary
obstruction.
Key words:
antibiotic prophylaxis – cholangitis – endoscopic treatment – biliary obstruction
|