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The number as well as the caliber of plastic stents used for EUS-guided PFC drainage are controversial in current practice [Lin et al., 2014]. The timing of necrosectomy in WOPN drainage continues to be debated. To date, no comparative studies have been conducted to investigate the ideal timing for stent removal. Thus, the aim of our study is to:
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Acute pancreatitis (AP) accounts for over 50% of all hospital admissions for pancreatic disease and still represents one of the most unpredictable diseases of the digestive system (NICE guideline, 2018). Therefore, AP can be linked to a number of systemic or local problems; in its most severe form, it can result in multiple organ failure and even death (Rana et al., 2015).
Pancreatic fluid collections (PFCs) are a common complication of AP, with a reported incidence of 43% (Cui et al., 2014). When there is pancreatic damage, such as AP, pancreatic trauma, postsurgery, posttransplant, or occlusion of the pancreatic duct (PD), PFCs develop. The management of PFCs must be guided by the classification of these entities according to their acuity and the presence or absence of necrosis.
Surgical drainage has been the standard of care for PFCs. The paradigm has, however, changed in favor of methods requiring endoscopic intervention and minimally invasive drainage due to recent advancements in endoscopic tools and techniques (Cui et al., 2014).
The Atlanta criteria refer to the initial global agreement on PFC classification that was created in 1993. PFCs were categorized as acute (forming within 4 weeks of pancreatitis onset) or chronic (forming after 4 weeks of pancreatitis onset) based on the original Atlanta criteria. Pancreatic necrosis, pancreatic pseudocysts (PPs), or pancreatic abscesses were the three further subtypes of chronic PFCs (Bradley et al., 1993).
Recent advances in pathophysiology and diagnostic tools warranted a revision to these criteria. The most important distinction to arise from the new classification system, known as the revised Atlanta criteria (Banks et al., 2013), is the delineation between collections containing only fluid and collections containing necrotic tissue with or without accompanying fluid.
The criteria for acute versus chronic PFCs is preserved, but new additions have been made based on the presence of necrosis. Acute collections are divided into acute peripancreatic fluid collections and acute necrotic collections. Chronic collections are divided into PPs and walled-off pancreatic necroses (WOPNs). These distinctions have helped guide the development of treatment strategies tailored to the acuity and contents of a given collection (Banks et al., 2013).
The original Atlanta criteria recommended drainage for PFCs based on the size of the collection as well as the presence of symptoms including abdominal pain, gastrointestinal (GI) or biliary obstruction, vascular compression, or infection. With recent advances in diagnostic tools and interventional techniques, indications for the drainage of PFCs have been revised to emphasize the presence of symptoms or infected collection (Trikudanathan et al., 2019).
(2) Proven or suspected infected PFCs with or without the presence of necrosis. Asymptomatic sterile necrotic collections and asymptomatic WOPN are not recommended for drainage, as they may undergo spontaneous resolution given time (Freeman et al., 2012).
The reason is that among asymptomatic necrosis, the content is liquefied in 28-35% of cases and the size decreases, especially in extra-pancreatic WON or WON without a disconnected pancreatic duct, without the need for further necrosectomy (Pawar et al., 2021).
According to a recent meta-analysis (Nakai et al., 2023), early interventions (before 4 weeks) for necrotizing pancreatitis were associated with higher mortality, the same rate of adverse events, and clinical success compared to delayed interventions; however, another meta-analysis reported similar outcomes for early or delayed interventions but a longer hospital stay for early interventions (Ramai et al., 2023).
As EUS can precisely quantify the distance between the GI lumen and the pseudocyst and use Doppler US to define a safe nonvascular window for draining, it is the recommended method for evaluating PFCs (Giovannini et al., 2007). Similarly, the type of stent that is selected for drainage can also be directly impacted by the sort of fluid that EUS detects.
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