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Cited 6 time in webofscience Cited 7 time in scopus
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Updates in bacteriological epidemiology of community-acquired severe acute cholangitis and the effectiveness of metronidazole added routinely to the first-line antimicrobial regimen

Authors
Lee, Jun KyuPark, Chang WookLee, Sang HyubKang, Hyoun WooKwon, Jae HyunKim, Jae HakLim, Yun JeongKim, Eu SukKoh, Moon-SooLee, Jin Ho
Issue Date
Dec-2013
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Keywords
Acute cholangitis; Cephalosporin; Metronidazole; Drug resistance; Biliary drainage
Citation
JOURNAL OF INFECTION AND CHEMOTHERAPY, v.19, no.6, pp 1029 - 1034
Pages
6
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF INFECTION AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume
19
Number
6
Start Page
1029
End Page
1034
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/18430
DOI
10.1007/s10156-013-0616-7
ISSN
1341-321X
1437-7780
Abstract
Prompt antimicrobial therapy, together with subsequent biliary drainage, is crucial to prevent the rapidly deteriorating course of severe acute cholangitis. Therefore, updates in bacteriological epidemiology and resistance profile are important for management of this critical disease. Also, because the routine addition of metronidazole to the first-line regimen is controversial, we intended this prospective study with historical controls. Patients with severe acute cholangitis who fulfilled the definition of severity by the Tokyo Guidelines and underwent biliary drainage within 24 h from presentation were enrolled prospectively from January 2010 to December 2011. During that period, metronidazole was not added to third-generation cephalosporins, which were used as the initial antimicrobials except for patients who were allergic to penicillin and received ciprofloxacin instead (no metronidazole group). Outcomes were compared with a historical cohort from March 2007 to December 2009 when metronidazole was added routinely (metronidazole group). A unified strategy was maintained throughout the whole period excepting the use of metronidazole. Outcomes between the metronidazole group (n = 338) and the no metronidazole group (n = 338) did not differ in terms of the rate of successful biliary drainage by interventional procedures (93.2 % vs. 94.7 %, p = 0.88), time elapsed for cholangitis to be controlled (10.4 +/- A 0.6 vs. 8.9 +/- A 1.2 days, p = 0.38), and mortality (1.2 % vs. 0.6 % with p = 0.34 for all causes and 0.9 % vs. 0 % with p = 0.15 for cholangitis-related, respectively). As the routine addition of metronidazole did not improve outcomes, it can be excluded from the first-line regimen if emergent biliary drainage can be performed efficiently.
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