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The Role of Antibiotic Treatment in Patients With Acute Mild Cholecystitis - A Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial

H

Hadassah Medical Center

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Cholecystitits

Treatments

Drug: No antibiotics
Drug: Antibiotic treatment

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00557453
cholecystitis-HMO-CTIL

Details and patient eligibility

About

The treatment of acute cholecystitis includes limited oral intake, antibiotics and early or delayed surgery. To date there are no randomized trials proving the benefit of antibiotic treatment.

The aim of this study is to prospectively and randomly compare between patients that are admitted for acute cholecystitis and treated with or without antibiotics.

Full description

Cholelithiasis and inflammatory biliary tract disease constitute a major health problem in western countries. Acute cholecystitis is the third major cause of emergency admission to a surgical ward and its incidence increases with increasing age. Acute cholecystitis is defined as acute inflammation of the gallbladder which is commonly caused by gallstones which are impacted in the cystic duct. The treatment of acute cholecystitis varies between different medical centers around the world. In some hospitals, mainly in the US, the most common treatment is early laparoscopic cholecystectomy within 72 hours from the onset of symptoms / admission. However, in the UK and many other centers in Europe the treatment of acute cholecystitis is conservative (NPO, IV fluids and antibiotics) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy is delayed. The reasons for delayed surgery differ between institutions and include the assumption of decreased complications, surgeon and OR availability and schedule, costs, and hospital policy.

A recent metanalysis proved similar safety and efficacy of early and delayed laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The conversion rate, length of operation and complication rate (overall complication rate, intra-abdominal collection, bile leak, and CBD injury) were also comparable.

At Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Mount Scopus patients with acute cholecystitis are treated conservatively followed by delayed laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Over the years this approach proved to carry relatively low rate of complications, mainly bile duct injuries <1%, without interruption to the busy OR schedule.

Regardless to the lack of evidence based guidelines for the treatment of acute cholecystitis the traditional triad of NPO, IV fluids and antibiotics was adopted at our institution vis-à-vis the higher complication and conversion rate for early cholecystectomy. The antibiotic treatment is associated with side effects, costs and most important unavoidable development of bacterial drug resistance. However, to date there are no randomized trials proving the superiority of either one of these methods.

Enrollment

120 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Patients with the diagnosis of mild acute cholecystitis that meet the following:

  1. Sonographic (or CT) findings:

    1. cholelithiasis or sludge and
    2. wall thickening > 4 mm, and
    3. positive sonographic Murphy sign,
    4. distended gallbladder (optional)
    5. pericystic fluid (optional)
  2. Additional one of the following:

    1. epigastric or RUQ pain
    2. fever > 38.0
    3. WBC > 10,000

Exclusion criteria

  1. Age - less than 18 or above 70
  2. Pregnant females
  3. Unconsentable patients
  4. NYHA > 3
  5. Use of steroids or immunosuppression
  6. Onset of typical abdominal pain for over than 72 hours
  7. Hemodynamic instability
  8. Fever > 39 or chills
  9. Palpable inflammatory RUQ mass
  10. Presence of peritonitis on physical examination
  11. WBC > 18,000
  12. Diastase > 200 (NL 20-100)
  13. Bilirubin > 85 (X5 the norm)
  14. Multi organ failure

Trial design

120 participants in 2 patient groups

A
Description:
Antibiotic treatment
Treatment:
Drug: Antibiotic treatment
B
Description:
Non antibiotic treatment
Treatment:
Drug: No antibiotics

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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