SIRS criteria as a way of predicting severity of acute pancreatitis
Date First Published:
March 29, 2017
Last Updated:
July 7, 2017
Report by:
Joel Wilson, Medical Student (The University of Manchester)
Three-Part Question:
In [patients with acute pancreatitis] can the [SIRS criteria][predict the severity of the acute pancreatitis]
Clinical Scenario:
A 69 year old man presents to the emergency department with epigastric pain that radiates to the back. He has been vomiting and has a fever. You suspect acute pancreatitis and wish to predict disease severity in order to start appropriate treatment.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-06/98 using the OVID interface.
([exp pancreatitis] AND [exp systemic inflammatory response syndrome OR SIRS.mp]) LIMIT to human AND English language AND yr="1990-current" AND "all adult (19 plus years)"
([exp pancreatitis] AND [exp systemic inflammatory response syndrome OR SIRS.mp]) LIMIT to human AND English language AND yr="1990-current" AND "all adult (19 plus years)"
Outcome:
250 papers found of which 3 were of use. 247 papers were discarded as either irrelevant or of insufficient quality for inclusion.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title | Patient Group | Study type (level of evidence) | Outcomes | Key results | Study Weaknesses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Can the Time Course of Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome Score Predict Future Organ Failure in Acute Pancreatitis? Kumar, Akshat MD*+; Chari, Suresh T. MD+; Vege, Santhi Swaroop MD+ 2014 USA | 117 patients with negative SIRS on day of diagnosis of acute pancreatitis vs patients with positive SIRS on day of diagnosis. | Prospective Cohort Study | Positive SIRS at day 1 | Patients with positive SIRS at day 1 had significantly higher prevalence of all adverse outcomes. Sensitivity for these were also high (73%-100%). | Single Centre |
Persistent SIRS at day 3 | Patients with persistent SIRS at day 3 had significantly higher incidence of all adverse outcomes. Sensitivity for these remained high and specificity increased (71%-81%). | ||||
Cumulative SIRS and organ failure | A new variable | ||||
Early systemic inflammatory response syndrome is associated with severe acute pancreatitis. Singh VK; Wu BU; Bollen TL; Repas K; Maurer R; Mortele KJ; Banks PA 2009 USA | 252 patients with acute pancreatitis, either with negative SIRS on day 1 or positive SIRS on day 1. | Prospective Cohort Study | Positive SIRS on day 1 | SIRS on day 1 predicted severe disease with high sensitivity (85%-100%). The absence of SIRS on day 1 was associated with a high negative predictive value (98%-100%). | Single Centre |
Persistent SIRS | Patients with persistent SIRS had an increased risk for severe disease. | ||||
Association between early systemic inflammatory response, severity of multiorgan dysfunction and death in acute pancreatitis. Mofidi R; Duff MD; Wigmore SJ; Madhavan KK; Garden OJ; Parks RW 2006 UK | 759 patients with acute pancreatitis; either with no SIRS on admission, SIRS at admission or persistent SIRS (>48h). | Prospective Cohort Study | Median cumulative Marshall Score | Was significantly higher in patients with persistent SIRS compared to in patients in whom SIRS resolved or in those with no SIRS. | Single Centre |
Mortality | Patients with persistent SIRS had higher mortality rates than those with transient or no SIRS. (25%, 8% and 0.7% respectively) |
Author Commentary:
There are 3 prospective cohort studies all demonstrating SIRS as a good severity predicting score in acute pancreatitis.
Bottom Line:
SIRS can be used to predict severity in acute pancreatitis.
References:
- Kumar, Akshat MD*+; Chari, Suresh T. MD+; Vege, Santhi Swaroop MD+. Can the Time Course of Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome Score Predict Future Organ Failure in Acute Pancreatitis?
- Singh VK; Wu BU; Bollen TL; Repas K; Maurer R; Mortele KJ; Banks PA. Early systemic inflammatory response syndrome is associated with severe acute pancreatitis.
- Mofidi R; Duff MD; Wigmore SJ; Madhavan KK; Garden OJ; Parks RW. Association between early systemic inflammatory response, severity of multiorgan dysfunction and death in acute pancreatitis.