Abstract

Abstract Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) during index admission for acute cholecystitis is considered a preferred mode of treating gallstone disease. The objective of this study is to evaluate the role of single dose pre-operative prophylactic antibiotics versus extended antibiotics therapy up to 5th post-operative days in these patients undergoing acute cholecystectomy for mild to moderate acute cholecystitis. Materials and methods RCTs reporting the use of single dose pre-operative prophylactic antibiotics versus extended antibiotics therapy up to 5th post-operative days following acute cholecystectomy were retrieved from the search of standard medical electronic databases and analysis was conducted by using the principles of meta-analysis on the statistical software RevMan version 5. Results The search of medical databases yielded 4 RCTs on 949 patients undergoing acute cholecystectomy. There were 481 patients in in single dose pre-operative antibiotics group whereas 468 patients received extended doses antibiotics therapy. In the random effects model analysis, the extended use of post-operative antibiotics in patients undergoing acute cholecystectomy for mild to moderate acute cholecystitis does not confer any extra benefit [risk ratio 1.05, 95%, CI (0.73, 1.51), Z = 0.25, P=0.80] in terms of reducing the infective complications. There was no heterogeneity (Tau2 = 0; Chi2 = 0.40, df = 3; (P = 0.94; I2 = 0 %) among included studies. Conclusion Post-operative extended use of antibiotics in patients undergoing acute cholecystectomy for mild to moderate acute cholecystitis does not demonstrate extra benefit to reduce infective complications.

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