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To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS

BACKGROUND: Pancreatitis complicating HIV infection, even in the Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) era, remains a management challenge. We felt there is a need to discern patterns in the biochemical markers, radiological studies, co-infections, length of stay (LOS) in patients with HIV or...

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Autores principales: Raza, Shahzad, Chaudhry, Naueen A., Brown, Jordan D., Aghaie, Sina, Rezai, Damoun, Khan, Areej, Tan, Paul De Leon, Berger, Barbara J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elmer Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3564562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23390470
http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/jocmr1040w
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author Raza, Shahzad
Chaudhry, Naueen A.
Brown, Jordan D.
Aghaie, Sina
Rezai, Damoun
Khan, Areej
Tan, Paul De Leon
Berger, Barbara J.
author_facet Raza, Shahzad
Chaudhry, Naueen A.
Brown, Jordan D.
Aghaie, Sina
Rezai, Damoun
Khan, Areej
Tan, Paul De Leon
Berger, Barbara J.
author_sort Raza, Shahzad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pancreatitis complicating HIV infection, even in the Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) era, remains a management challenge. We felt there is a need to discern patterns in the biochemical markers, radiological studies, co-infections, length of stay (LOS) in patients with HIV or AIDS AND pancreatitis. METHODS: This is a retrospective study conducted from June, 2008 to August, 2010 on patients admitted with acute pancreatitis to our hospital. We extracted and compared the following parameters: biochemical markers, HBV markers (surface antigen, core antibody and surface antibody), HCV antibody, radiological studies, and length of stay (LOS). The Balthazar Grade score was used to assess radiological severity of disease. We stratified the cohort into comparison subsets according to CD4 count. RESULTS: Ninety-four admissions met the criteria for HIV or AIDS AND pancreatitis; 67 unique patients comprised the cohort. Median age was 48 years (range, 23 to 60 years). Thirty seven (55%) were male, 30 (45%), female. Two third (n = 51) (76%) were African American. Known risk factors included a history of pancreatitis, 17 (25%); cholecystitis, 13 (19%); alcohol abuse, 25 (37%); Intravenous drug abuse, 18 (27%). Only 36 (38%) admissions were on HAART regimen. Biochemical features on admission were: WBC, 6,100/mm(3) (900 - 25,700); amylase, 152 U/L (30 - 1,344); lipase, 702.5 U/L (30 - 5,766), triglyceride, 65 mg/dL (57 - 400); glucose, 94 mg/dL (60 - 1,670); lactate, 2.3 mmol/L (1.09 - 5.49); AST, 61.5 U/L (9 - 1,950); LDH, 762 U/L (394 - 5,500); bicarbonate 19.5 mEq/L (3.3 - 82.7). Interestingly, 62% patients had normal pancreas on CT scan on admission. Of 67 individuals, hepatitis profile was available in 43, 21 (49%) were positive for HCV, 11 (26%) had markers for HBV. Four of 11 patients (36) with CD4 < 50 had evidence of persistent HBV (+core, -surface ab). Patients with CD4 < 200 have a median time for hospital course of 8 days (range 4 - 61 days) compare to 3 days in patients with CD4 > 200. P = 0.03 via t-test comparison. One patient with CD4 < 50 died due to acute pancreatitis. CONCLUSION: Pancreatitis remains a major cause of morbidity in HIV-infected individuals. This study has provided detailed features in the HAART therapy era about the clinical, biochemical and radiological features of pancreatitis. Half of our patients were positive for HCV; additionally, 36% with CD4 < 50 had persistent HBV. As opposed to earlier studies, we did not find a female predominance. Patients with CD4 < 200 had a 2.67-fold increase length of stay. Future studies are needed for a closer look on viral cofactors which might precipitate episodes of acute pancreatitis.
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spelling pubmed-35645622013-02-06 To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS Raza, Shahzad Chaudhry, Naueen A. Brown, Jordan D. Aghaie, Sina Rezai, Damoun Khan, Areej Tan, Paul De Leon Berger, Barbara J. J Clin Med Res Original Article BACKGROUND: Pancreatitis complicating HIV infection, even in the Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) era, remains a management challenge. We felt there is a need to discern patterns in the biochemical markers, radiological studies, co-infections, length of stay (LOS) in patients with HIV or AIDS AND pancreatitis. METHODS: This is a retrospective study conducted from June, 2008 to August, 2010 on patients admitted with acute pancreatitis to our hospital. We extracted and compared the following parameters: biochemical markers, HBV markers (surface antigen, core antibody and surface antibody), HCV antibody, radiological studies, and length of stay (LOS). The Balthazar Grade score was used to assess radiological severity of disease. We stratified the cohort into comparison subsets according to CD4 count. RESULTS: Ninety-four admissions met the criteria for HIV or AIDS AND pancreatitis; 67 unique patients comprised the cohort. Median age was 48 years (range, 23 to 60 years). Thirty seven (55%) were male, 30 (45%), female. Two third (n = 51) (76%) were African American. Known risk factors included a history of pancreatitis, 17 (25%); cholecystitis, 13 (19%); alcohol abuse, 25 (37%); Intravenous drug abuse, 18 (27%). Only 36 (38%) admissions were on HAART regimen. Biochemical features on admission were: WBC, 6,100/mm(3) (900 - 25,700); amylase, 152 U/L (30 - 1,344); lipase, 702.5 U/L (30 - 5,766), triglyceride, 65 mg/dL (57 - 400); glucose, 94 mg/dL (60 - 1,670); lactate, 2.3 mmol/L (1.09 - 5.49); AST, 61.5 U/L (9 - 1,950); LDH, 762 U/L (394 - 5,500); bicarbonate 19.5 mEq/L (3.3 - 82.7). Interestingly, 62% patients had normal pancreas on CT scan on admission. Of 67 individuals, hepatitis profile was available in 43, 21 (49%) were positive for HCV, 11 (26%) had markers for HBV. Four of 11 patients (36) with CD4 < 50 had evidence of persistent HBV (+core, -surface ab). Patients with CD4 < 200 have a median time for hospital course of 8 days (range 4 - 61 days) compare to 3 days in patients with CD4 > 200. P = 0.03 via t-test comparison. One patient with CD4 < 50 died due to acute pancreatitis. CONCLUSION: Pancreatitis remains a major cause of morbidity in HIV-infected individuals. This study has provided detailed features in the HAART therapy era about the clinical, biochemical and radiological features of pancreatitis. Half of our patients were positive for HCV; additionally, 36% with CD4 < 50 had persistent HBV. As opposed to earlier studies, we did not find a female predominance. Patients with CD4 < 200 had a 2.67-fold increase length of stay. Future studies are needed for a closer look on viral cofactors which might precipitate episodes of acute pancreatitis. Elmer Press 2013-02 2013-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3564562/ /pubmed/23390470 http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/jocmr1040w Text en Copyright 2013, Raza et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Raza, Shahzad
Chaudhry, Naueen A.
Brown, Jordan D.
Aghaie, Sina
Rezai, Damoun
Khan, Areej
Tan, Paul De Leon
Berger, Barbara J.
To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS
title To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS
title_full To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS
title_fullStr To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS
title_full_unstemmed To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS
title_short To Study the Clinical, Biochemical and Radiological Features of Acute Pancreatitis in HIV and AIDS
title_sort to study the clinical, biochemical and radiological features of acute pancreatitis in hiv and aids
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3564562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23390470
http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/jocmr1040w
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