Journal of the Pancreas Open Access

  • ISSN: 1590-8577
  • Journal h-index: 82
  • Journal CiteScore: 35.06
  • Journal Impact Factor: 24.75
  • Average acceptance to publication time (5-7 days)
  • Average article processing time (30-45 days) Less than 5 volumes 30 days
    8 - 9 volumes 40 days
    10 and more volumes 45 days

Abstract

Jejunal Feeding in Chronic Pancreatitis with Severe Necrosis

József Hamvas, Richard Schwab, Ákos Pap

Context Necrotizing pancreatitis is the most serious form of pancreatic inflammatory disease leading to multiorgan failure and a high (15-20%) mortality rate. The poor nutritional and metabolic conditions and secondary bacterial translocation raise the mortality rate even more.

Objective The aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of jejunal feeding in cases of chronicpancreatitis with extended necrosis. 

Patients In our institution, over a five-year period, 86 patients with severe necrotizingpancreatitis were treated for extended necrosis. In 19 patients, chronic calcifying pancreatitiswas demonstrated by computed tomography showing more than 20% necrosis in the residual pancreas as well.

Setting In 12 cases, nutrition was provided by jejunal feeding using an endoscopically placednasojejunal feeding tube, whereas in 7 cases, hypocaloric parenteral nutrition was used.

Design Retrospective unicenter study.

Main outcome measures The rate of healing with conservative treatment.

Results Two of the 12 jejunally fed patients were operated on because of complications of pancreatitis. Five patients required intervention in the hypocaloric parenteral nutrition group: 4 were operated on and one more needed endoscopic intervention. The healing rate was significantly higher (P=0.045) in the jejunal feeding group (83.3%) than in the parenteral nutrition (28.6%) patients.

Conclusions In cases of chronic calcifying pancreatitis serious necrosis can develop in theresidual pancreas resulting in a severe acute pancreatitis-like disease. A better healing rate was achieved and less interventions became necessary using nasojejunal tube feeding than in the parenteral nutrition group and this was analogous to what was observed in severe necrotizing pancreatitis This form of pancreatitis has not yet been described in the literature in detail. The authors suggest that it be regarded as a separate entity.