Abstract
Acute cholecystitis (AC) is one of the most common emergency diseases in surgical practice. Although the gold standard treatment is laparoscopic cholecystectomy, percutaneous cholecystostomy (PC) is performed in some patients due to age, comorbidity, and delays in admission. We aimed to investigate the effect of timing on the clinical process of patients undergoing PC. Patients who underwent PC between February 2017 and December 2021 were included in the study. Those who un-derwent PC in the first 72 h were determined as the early PC group, and those who underwent PC after 72 h were determined as the late PC group. Demographic information of the patients, clinical information before drainage, biochemical values of the first 3 days, length of hospital stay, morbidity and mortality in the early and late period after drainage, and elective cholecystectomy information were recorded. These data were compared between the two groups. One hundred and twenty-two patients were included in the study. Early PC was performed in 98 patients (80.3%) and late PC was performed in 24 patients (19.7%). The median follow-up period was 26.6 months (min: 0.25-max: 67) in the early PC group and 26.4 months (min: 0.6-max: 66) in the late PC group (P=0.408). There was no statistically significant difference in mean age, distribu-tion of males and women, concomitant disease, Charlson Comorbidity Index, hepatopancreatobiliary pathology (HPBP), endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in history and grade (TG18) compared to Tokyo classification (P>0.05). There was no difference between the biochemical parameters (P>0.05). In our study, the median length of hospital stay was 6 (min: 2-max: 36) days in the early PC group, and the median was 9 days (min: 5-max: 20) in the late PC group (P<0.001). A total of 25 patients developed HPBP after PC, 16 of which were AC. There was no statistically significant difference between the early and late PC groups in terms of HPBP develop-ment after PC (P=0.576). There was no statistically significant difference between the early and late PC group in terms of the rate of surgery and type of operation (emergency/elective, open/laparoscopic/conversion, total/subtotal, duration) (P>0.05). Discussions about the right timing are ongoing. In our study, we found that patients who underwent early PC had shorter hospital stays. There was no difference between the early and late groups in terms of patient characteristics and severity of AC. PC procedure in AC should be based on algorithms determined by objective data instead of patient-based indications with ran-domized controlled trials.
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More From: Ulusal travma ve acil cerrahi dergisi = Turkish journal of trauma & emergency surgery : TJTES
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