Endoscopic Sphincterotomy and Recurrence of Acute Pancreatitis in Gallstone Patients Considered Unfit for Surgery

Abstract
The aim of the present prospective study was to investigate whether endoscopic sphincterotomy may be useful in preventing recurrence of acute pancreatitis in patients with gallstones and a high anesthesiological risk of cholecystectomy. Twenty-six elderly patients with severe cardiopulmonary, hepatic, and renal diseases were considered. Endoscopic sphincterotomy was successful in 19 cases (group A: mean age, 78.4 years; range, 71–87) and failed in 7 patients (group B: mean age, 79.8 years; range 73–85). In the follow-up period biliary pain without an increase in pancreatic serum enzymes occurred in six patients in group A and in all patients in group B (p = 0.002); recurrence of acute biliary pancreatitis with a need for hospitalization occurred in one patient in group A and in four patients in group B (p = 0.01). These results suggest that endoscopic sphincterotomy may be considered a very useful option in reducing the recurrence of acute biliary pancreatitis in elderly patients with gallstones and a high anesthesiological risk of cholecystectomy.

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