2012-04-01
Functional and medical outcomes after tailored surgery for pain due to chronic pancreatitis
Publication
Publication
Annals of Surgery , Volume 255 - Issue 4 p. 763- 770
Objective: We measured a comprehensive set of outcome measures after different surgical procedures for painful chronic pancreatitis (CP) at long-term follow-up. Background: Pain caused by CP can be alleviated through operative intervention with type of procedure depending on anatomical abnormalities. Outcome measures include functional (pain relief, quality of life [QoL]), medical (endo-and exocrine function), and clinical (reoperation) results reported by patient. Methods: A cross-sectional cohort of 223 consecutive patients who underwent surgical drainage, head resection, or left-sided pancreas resection, depending on anatomical abnormalities, was analyzed. Participating patients were reassessed during a prospectively scheduled outpatient clinic visit. Results: At follow-up, 44 patients had died; 146 of 179 living patients consented to participate in the study. After 63 months (range: 14-268), 68% reported no or little pain, 19% reported intermediate pain, and 12% reported severe pain. Preoperative daily opioid use (OR: 3.04; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.09-8.49) and high numbers of preceding endoscopic procedures (OR [odds ratio]: 3.89; 95% CI: 1.01-14.9) were associated with persistent severe pain. Compared with the general population, physical more than mental QoL remained impaired (P < 0.05). At follow-up, endocrine insufficiency was present in 57% of patients and exocrine insufficiency was present in 77%. Independently, a head resection and a reoperation for any cause were moderately associated with new-onset diabetes (P < 0.1). Compared with patients who underwent left-sided resection, the risk of developing exocrine insufficiency after surgery was higher after drainage or head resection. After 20 months (interquartile range: 10-51) after surgery, 26 (12%) of 223 patients underwent 1 or more elective reoperations. Conclusions: Operative intervention for painful CP, tailored to anatomical abnormalities, results in excellent to fair long-term pain relief, but approximately 10% of patients do not respond. QoL scores remained slightly compromised. High preoperative pain levels, suggested through daily opioid use and high numbers of endoscopic procedures, are associated with less favorable outcome.
| Additional Metadata | |
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| doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0b013e31824b7697, hdl.handle.net/1765/57158 | |
| Annals of Surgery | |
| Organisation | Department of Gastroenterology & Hepatology |
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van der Gaag, N., van Gulik, T., Busch, O., Sprangers, M., Bruno, M., Zevenbergen, C., … Boermeester, M. (2012). Functional and medical outcomes after tailored surgery for pain due to chronic pancreatitis. Annals of Surgery, 255(4), 763–770. doi:10.1097/SLA.0b013e31824b7697 |
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