BMC Medical Imaging (Aug 2021)

Pneumatosis intestinalis and porto-mesenteric venous gas: a multicenter study

  • Marta Della Seta,
  • Roman Kloeckner,
  • Daniel Pinto dos Santos,
  • Thula Cannon Walter-Rittel,
  • Felix Hahn,
  • Jörn Henze,
  • Annika Gropp,
  • Johann Pratschke,
  • Bernd Hamm,
  • Dominik Geisel,
  • Timo Alexander Auer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12880-021-00651-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Estimating the prognosis of patients with pneumatosis intestinalis (PI) and porto-mesenteric venous gas (PMVG) can be challenging. The purpose of this study was to refine prognostication to improve decision making in daily clinical routine. Methods A total of 290 patients with confirmed PI were included in the final analysis. The presence of PMVG and mortality (90d follow-up) were evaluated with regard to the influence of possible risk factors. Furthermore, a linear estimation model was devised combining significant parameters to calculate accuracies for predicting death in patients undergoing surgery by means of a defined operation point (ROC-analysis). Results Overall, 90d mortality was 55.2% (160/290). In patients with PI only, mortality was 46.5% (78/168) and increased significantly to 67.2% (82/122) in combination with PMVG (median survival: PI: 58d vs. PI and PMVG: 41d; p 90d treated conservatively (24.9% of the entire collective; 72/290) PMVG/PI was defined as “benign”/reversible. PMVG, COPD, sepsis and a low platelet count were found to correlate with a worse prognosis helping to identify patients who might not profit from surgery, in this context our calculation model reaches accuracies of 97% specificity, 20% sensitivity, 90% PPV and 45% NPV. Conclusion Although PI is associated with high morbidity and mortality, „benign causes” are common. However, in concomitant PMVG, mortality rates increase significantly. Our mathematical model could serve as a decision support tool to identify patients who are least likely to benefit from surgery, and to potentially reduce overtreatment in this subset of patients.

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