Abstract Background Postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF) remains a significant complication post pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD). Recent publications show no increased incidence of POPF due to positive bile cultures. A literature search on PubMed did not show any review on the relevance of specific cultures and their exact incidence of POPF. POPF is defined as Drain Amylase greater than three times its serum level on or after postoperative day 3. A relatively benign clinical course is grade A, moderately unwell patients requiring medical/minimal intervention (grade B), and critically ill patients with sepsis, requiring invasive intervention (grade C). Grade B + C is defined as CR-POPF. Method A retrospective single-centre analysis of all patients with pancreaticoduodenectomy between 2017 and 2021 was reviewed. The clinical data that were reviewed were age, gender, length of stay[LOS], tumour staging, mortality rates, Pancreatic duct[PD], Pre-op stenting, the documented incidence of POPF/CR-POPF, Intra-Operative Bile Cultures[IOBC] and antibiotic sensitivity. The primary outcome was POPF. Secondary outcomes were 90-day mortality, LOS, return to theatre, Postoperative haemorrhage (POPH), and organ-specific relevance of POPF. All data was analysed using SPSS IBM version 29. P< 0.05 was taken as clinically significant. Results 100 patients were included in the study. The mean age was 68.8 (SD-9.5). The M: F ratio was 54:46. The mean postoperative length of hospital stay was 19.38 days. 48 patients (48%) were diagnosed with a POPF, among which, 22 patients (47.8%) developed a CR-POPF. 57 patients had a positive IOBC. The incidence of POPF in patients with Positive IOBC was 43/57(75.43%) and that was 5/43(11.62%) of the patients with Negative IOBC (P < .0001).10% of patients had postoperative haemorrhage (POPH). 9% had 90-day mortality. All 9% of patients who had a return to theatre had POPF. Conclusion Univariate analysis and logistic regression demonstrated that a positive IOBC had a higher associated incidence of POPF who underwent PD, with Klebsiella being the most common and statistically significant[P<.005]. The most common antibiotic found to be sensitive was Gentamicin, which is 25 per cent and, in combination with Co-amoxiclav, was found to be sensitive in 21.8% of cases. However, this is a single-centre retrospective study with variable operative techniques for different patient groups. Further studies would be warranted before correlating any results to all populations of patients developing POPF post pancreaticoduodenectomy.
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