Chronic alcohol related pancreatitis
NICE suggest that for diagnosis of chronic alcohol-related pancreatitis use all of the following:
- the person's symptoms
- imaging to determine pancreatic structure and
- tests of pancreatic exocrine and endocrine function
- computed tomography is the first-line imaging modality for people with a history and symptoms suggestive of chronic alcohol-related pancreatitis
Management
- for people with steatorrhoea or poor nutritional status, offer pancreatic enzyme supplements
- if pain is the only symptom, do not give enzyme supplements.
- for people with pain:
- refer to a specialist centre for multidisciplinary assessment
- offer surgery (in preference to endoscopic therapy) to people with large-duct (obstructive) chronic pancreatitis
- offer coeliac axis block, splanchnicectomy or surgery to people with small-duct (non-obstructive) chronic pancreatitis if their pain is poorly controlled
- for people with pain:
Notes (2):
- alcohol misuse is the most common cause of chronic pancreatitis
- evidence suggests that a threshold of five drinks or more per day is associated with the development of chronic pancreatitis
- note though that less than 5% of heavy drinkers develop chronic pancreatitis, suggesting that additional factors are involved in disease development
References:
- NICE. Alcohol-use disorders: diagnosis and management of physical complications. Clinical guideline CG100. Published June 2010, last updated April 2017
- Hines O J, Pandol S J. Management of chronic pancreatitis BMJ 2024; 384 :e070920 doi:10.1136/bmj-2023-070920
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