Reuters Health Information: Indomethacin may curb pancreatitis after cholangiopancreatography
Indomethacin may curb pancreatitis after cholangiopancreatography
Last Updated: 2016-06-03
By David Douglas
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Rectal indomethacin may cut the
risk of pancreatitis after endoscopic retrograde
cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) in a wide range of patients,
suggests a new study.
As Dr. Michael L. Kochman told Reuters Health by email,
"this retrospective study demonstrates that the use of a simple
pharmacologic intervention can safely reduce both the incidence
and severity of pancreatitis in patients undergoing ERCP, even
those who have a predicted low-risk for pancreatitis."
Dr. Kochman, of the University of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia, and colleagues examined data from 2009 to 2015 on
just over 2,000 patients who received indomethacin and a similar
number of patients who did not. After June of 2012, most such
patients received indomethacin.
Their findings appeared online May 20 in Gastroenterology.
The non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) was
associated with lower odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis overall
(odds ratio, 0.35; p<0.001) and in particular moderate to severe
disease (OR, 0.17; p<0.001). In patients with malignant
obstruction, the corresponding proportions were 64% and 80%
(both p<0.001).
Only 2.31% of patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma given
indomethacin developed PEP compared to 7.53% of those who did
not receive the agent (p<0.001). Moreover, only 0.59% of these
indomethacin recipients developed moderate to severe PEP
compared to 4.32% of the other group (p=0.001).
In high-risk patients overall, the corresponding proportions
were 4.50% and 8.03%. For moderate to severe PEP, they were
0.90% and 4.48%.
There was also a significant reduction in PEP and moderate
to severe PEP in other specific subgroups, such as patients with
gallstones and bile leaks.
Adverse events were few. Thirteen (0.65%) patients who
received indomethacin developed post-procedural gastrointestinal
bleeding compared to nine (0.45%) patients who did not. No
patients had an allergic reaction to indomethacin.
The researchers conclude, "our findings suggest a role for
increased routine usage of post-ERCP rectal indomethacin and the
need for further randomized control trials investigating rectal
indomethacin in specific subpopulations of low-risk patients."
Commenting on the findings by email, Dr. B. Joseph Elmunzer
of the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston told
Reuters Health, "Although the role of rectal indomethacin for
preventing post-ERCP pancreatitis in average-risk patients has
been controversial, the findings of this high-quality,
real-world effectiveness study are consistent with clinical
trial data demonstrating that rectal NSAIDs are effective in
both high and average risk cases."
Dr. Elmunzer, who has conducted research in the field,
concluded that "these results should have a positive impact on
clinical practice by influencing practitioners to more broadly
administer this beneficial medication."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/25Bbwmc
Gastroenterol 2016.
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