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Early prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis. Is this possible?

Andrén Sandberg, Ake and Borgström, Anders LU (2002) In Journal of the Pancreas 3(5). p.25-116
Abstract
One out of ten cases of acute pancreatitis develops into severe acute pancreatitis which is a life threatening disorder with a high mortality rate. The other nine cases are self limiting and need very little therapy. The specificity of good clinical judgement on admission, concerning the prognosis of the attack, is high (high specificity) but misses a lot of severe cases (low sensitivity). The prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis was first suggested by John HC Ranson in 1974. Much effort has been put into finding a simple scoring system or a good biochemical marker for selecting the severe cases of acute pancreatitis immediately on admission. Today C-reactive protein is the method of choice although this marker is not valid until... (More)
One out of ten cases of acute pancreatitis develops into severe acute pancreatitis which is a life threatening disorder with a high mortality rate. The other nine cases are self limiting and need very little therapy. The specificity of good clinical judgement on admission, concerning the prognosis of the attack, is high (high specificity) but misses a lot of severe cases (low sensitivity). The prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis was first suggested by John HC Ranson in 1974. Much effort has been put into finding a simple scoring system or a good biochemical marker for selecting the severe cases of acute pancreatitis immediately on admission. Today C-reactive protein is the method of choice although this marker is not valid until 48-72 hours after the onset of pain. Inflammatory mediators upstream from CRP like interleukin-6 and other cytokines are likely to react faster and preliminary results for some of these mediators look promising. Another successful approach has been to study markers for the activation of trypsinogen such as TAP and CAPAP. This is based on studies showing that active trypsin is the initial motor of the inflammatory process in acute pancreatitis. In the near future a combined clinical and laboratory approach for early severity prediction will be the most reliable. Clinical judgement predicts 1/3 of the severe cases on admission and early markers for either inflammation or trypsinogen activation should accurately identify 50-60% of the mild cases among the rest, thus missing only 2-4% of the remaining severe cases. One problem is that there is no simple and fast method to analyze any of these parameters. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Journal of the Pancreas
volume
3
issue
5
pages
25 - 116
publisher
E.S. Burioni ricerche bibliografiche
external identifiers
  • pmid:12221326
  • scopus:3242679665
ISSN
1590-8577
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0d971a50-fe24-4b82-9b23-7d6160dbcfaf (old id 110350)
alternative location
http://www.joplink.net/prev/200209/01.html
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:21:21
date last changed
2022-01-28 19:06:50
@article{0d971a50-fe24-4b82-9b23-7d6160dbcfaf,
  abstract     = {{One out of ten cases of acute pancreatitis develops into severe acute pancreatitis which is a life threatening disorder with a high mortality rate. The other nine cases are self limiting and need very little therapy. The specificity of good clinical judgement on admission, concerning the prognosis of the attack, is high (high specificity) but misses a lot of severe cases (low sensitivity). The prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis was first suggested by John HC Ranson in 1974. Much effort has been put into finding a simple scoring system or a good biochemical marker for selecting the severe cases of acute pancreatitis immediately on admission. Today C-reactive protein is the method of choice although this marker is not valid until 48-72 hours after the onset of pain. Inflammatory mediators upstream from CRP like interleukin-6 and other cytokines are likely to react faster and preliminary results for some of these mediators look promising. Another successful approach has been to study markers for the activation of trypsinogen such as TAP and CAPAP. This is based on studies showing that active trypsin is the initial motor of the inflammatory process in acute pancreatitis. In the near future a combined clinical and laboratory approach for early severity prediction will be the most reliable. Clinical judgement predicts 1/3 of the severe cases on admission and early markers for either inflammation or trypsinogen activation should accurately identify 50-60% of the mild cases among the rest, thus missing only 2-4% of the remaining severe cases. One problem is that there is no simple and fast method to analyze any of these parameters.}},
  author       = {{Andrén Sandberg, Ake and Borgström, Anders}},
  issn         = {{1590-8577}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{25--116}},
  publisher    = {{E.S. Burioni ricerche bibliografiche}},
  series       = {{Journal of the Pancreas}},
  title        = {{Early prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis. Is this possible?}},
  url          = {{http://www.joplink.net/prev/200209/01.html}},
  volume       = {{3}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}