BACKGROUND: Percutaneous drainage of pyogenic liver abscess has become first-line treatment. In the past surgical drainage was preferred in some centres. AIM: The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the effectiveness of percutaneous treatments and surgical drainage, in terms of treatment success, hospital stay and costs. PATIENTS: Data of 148 patients (90 males; 58 females; mean age, 61 yrs; range, 30-86 yrs) were retrospectively analysed. METHODS: Patients' outcomes, including the length of hospital stay, procedure-related complications, treatment failure and death, were recorded. Multiple logistic regression model was used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: One hundred and four patients (83 with solitary and 21 with multiple abscesses) were treated percutaneously, either by needle aspiration (91 patients) or catheter drainage (13 patients) depending on the abscess's size, and 44 patients (30 with solitary and 14 with multiple abscesses) were treated surgically. There was no statistically significant difference in patients' demographics or abscess characteristics between groups. Hospital stay was longer, and costs were higher in patients treated surgically (p<0.001). There was statistically significant difference in morbidity rate between groups (p<0.001). No death occurred in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Percutaneous and surgical treatment of pyogenic liver abscesses are both effective, nevertheless percutaneous drainage carries lower morbidity and is cheaper

Percutaneous and surgical treatment of pyogenic liver abscesses : observation over a 21-year period in 148 patients / G. Ferraioli, A. Garlaschelli, D. Zanaboni, R. Gulizia, E. Brunetti, F.P. Tinozzi, C. Camma, C. Filice. - In: DIGESTIVE AND LIVER DISEASE. - ISSN 1590-8658. - 40:8(2008 Aug), pp. 690-696.

Percutaneous and surgical treatment of pyogenic liver abscesses : observation over a 21-year period in 148 patients

R. Gulizia;
2008

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Percutaneous drainage of pyogenic liver abscess has become first-line treatment. In the past surgical drainage was preferred in some centres. AIM: The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the effectiveness of percutaneous treatments and surgical drainage, in terms of treatment success, hospital stay and costs. PATIENTS: Data of 148 patients (90 males; 58 females; mean age, 61 yrs; range, 30-86 yrs) were retrospectively analysed. METHODS: Patients' outcomes, including the length of hospital stay, procedure-related complications, treatment failure and death, were recorded. Multiple logistic regression model was used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: One hundred and four patients (83 with solitary and 21 with multiple abscesses) were treated percutaneously, either by needle aspiration (91 patients) or catheter drainage (13 patients) depending on the abscess's size, and 44 patients (30 with solitary and 14 with multiple abscesses) were treated surgically. There was no statistically significant difference in patients' demographics or abscess characteristics between groups. Hospital stay was longer, and costs were higher in patients treated surgically (p<0.001). There was statistically significant difference in morbidity rate between groups (p<0.001). No death occurred in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Percutaneous and surgical treatment of pyogenic liver abscesses are both effective, nevertheless percutaneous drainage carries lower morbidity and is cheaper
Drainage; Interventional procedure; Liver; Liver abscess; Retrospective studies; Treatment outcome; Ultrasound
ago-2008
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
YDLD_1244.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Pre-print (manoscritto inviato all'editore)
Dimensione 196.77 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
196.77 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/57879
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 23
  • Scopus 53
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 37
social impact