4.6 Article

Dynamic changes in the pancreatitis activity scoring system during hospital course in a multicenter, prospective cohort

Journal

JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 9, Pages 2416-2423

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgh.15430

Keywords

Acute pancreatitis; Disease activity; Length of hospital stay; Pancreas

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study validated the Pancreatitis Activity Scoring System (PASS) in a cohort of acute pancreatitis patients and found significant differences in PASS trajectories among different severity levels and lengths of hospital stay groups.
Background and Aim The primary aim was to validate the Pancreatitis Activity Scoring System (PASS) in a multicenter prospectively ascertained acute pancreatitis (AP) cohort. Second, we investigated the association of early PASS trajectories with disease severity and length of hospital stay (LOS). Methods Data were prospectively collected through the APPRENTICE consortium (2015-2018). AP severity was categorized based on revised Atlanta classification. Delta PASS (Delta PASS) was calculated by subtracting activity score from baseline value. PASS trajectories were compared between severity subsets. Subsequently, the cohort was subdivided into three LOS subgroups as short (S-LOS): 2-3 days; intermediate (I-LOS): 3-7 days; and long (L-LOS): >= 7 days. The generalized estimating equations model was implemented to compare PASS trajectories. Results There were 434 subjects analyzed including 322 (74%) mild, 86 (20%) moderately severe, and 26 (6%) severe AP. Severe AP subjects had the highest activity levels and the slowest rate of decline in activity (P = 0.039). Focusing on mild AP, L-LOS subjects (34%) had 28 points per day slower decline; whereas, S-LOS group (13%) showed 34 points per day sharper decrease compared with I-LOS (53%; P < 0.001). We noticed an outlier subset with a median admission-PASS of 466 compared with 140 in the rest. Morphine equivalent dose constituted 80% of the total PASS in the outliers (median morphine equivalent dose score = 392), compared with only 25% in normal-range subjects (score = 33, P value < 0.001). Conclusions This study highlighted that PASS can quantify AP activity. Significant differences in PASS trajectories were found both in revised Atlanta classification severity and LOS groups, which can be harnessed in AP monitoring/management ( number, NCT03075618).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available