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. 1993;6(4):287–293. doi: 10.1155/1993/17078

The Outcome of Cholangitis After Percutaneous Biliary Drainage in Neoplastic Jaundice

Riccardo A Audisio 1,, Carlo Morosi 2, Federico Bozzetti 3, Guido Cozzi 2, Massimo Bellomi 4, Paola Pisani 5, Alessandra Pestalozza 2, Leandro Gennari 3, Aldo Severini 2
PMCID: PMC2443033  PMID: 8217925

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to evaluate factors affecting the outcome of cholangitis after PTBD in jaundiced cancer patients. Twenty nine patients with neoplastic jaundice (male/female ratio 13/16, median age 55 years) with full clinical data, were treated by PTBD and developed cholangitis at a median of 9 days later. Four patients (14%) died of biliary sepsis a median of one month after PTBD while the other 25 survived a median of 6 months, with one week median duration of cholangitis. The probability of the cholangitis resolving was analyzed by time to resolution and it was found that 50% and 100% of the recoveries occurred 5 and 9 months respectively from the onset of the complication.

The series was analyzed to determine the role of several variables (disease/patient/treatment related) in the resolution of cholangitis. Only a low stricture site, a large initial drainage catheter (10F) and a temperature increase exceeding 39° C were correlated with a positive outcome. We conclude that PTBD-related cholangitis has, in our experience, a good chance of cure, low mortality rate and satisfactory 6 months median survival.

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