Rm. Sperling et al., RECURRENT PYOGENIC CHOLANGITIS IN ASIAN IMMIGRANTS TO THE UNITED-STATES - NATURAL-HISTORY AND ROLE OF THERAPEUTIC ERCP, Digestive diseases and sciences, 42(4), 1997, pp. 865-871
We reviewed the clinical presentation, cholangiographic features, and
long-term outcomes in 41 patients with recurrent pyogenic cholangitis
(RPC, ''Oriental'' cholangiohepatitis) who underwent ERCP at our insti
tution, comparing patients who were initially managed with therapeutic
ERCP, immediate hepatobiliary surgery, and no intervention. Patients
undergoing only diagnostic ERCP had recurrent symptoms in 62% of cases
, twice as often as patients managed initially by therapeutic ERCP or
immediate surgery. These former patients required subsequent surgery m
ore often than patients in the latter two groups. Outcomes for patient
s with diffuse biliary calculi were no different between patients mana
ged by therapeutic ERCP or by immediate hepatobiliary surgery. In the
15 patients with only extrahepatic stones, 7/9 (71%) managed by therap
eutic endoscopy and 7/8 (87.5%) managed by immediate hepatobiliary sur
gery were asymptomatic at almost two years mean follow-up (P > 0.05).
Patients having undergone at least one definitive hepatobiliary surger
y had fewer recurrences when managed by repeat surgery, although the d
ifference was not statistically significant. Four of six (67%) patient
s with dominant strictures managed endoscopically are asymptomatic at
mean follow-up of 15 months. Our study emphasizes the recurrent nature
of symptoms in RPC and supports the primary role of therapeutic ERCP
in managing these patients, especially those with extrahepatic stone d
isease alone.