Gastroenterology Research and Practice (Jan 2010)

Prediction of Patients with Acute Cholecystitis Requiring Emergent Cholecystectomy: A Simple Score

  • Wael N. Yacoub,
  • Mikael Petrosyan,
  • Indu Sehgal,
  • Yanling Ma,
  • Parakrama Chandrasoma,
  • Rodney J. Mason

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/901739
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2010

Abstract

Read online

The objective was to develop a score, to stratify patients with acute cholecystitis into high, intermediate, or low probability of gangrenous cholecystitis. The probability of gangrenous cholecystitis (score) was derived from a logistic regression of a clinical and pathological review of 245 patients undergoing urgent cholecystectomy. Sixty-eight patients had gangrenous inflammation, 132 acute, and 45 no inflammation. The score comprised of: age > 45 years (1 point), heart rate > 90 beats/min (1 point), male (2 points), Leucocytosis > 13,000/mm3 (1.5 points), and ultrasound gallbladder wall thickness > 4.5 mm (1 point). The prevalence of gangrenous cholecystitis was 13% in the low-probability (0–2 points), 33% in the intermediate-probability (2–4.5 points), and 87% in the high probability category (>4.5 points). A cutoff score of 2 identified 31 (69%) patients with no acute inflammation (PPV 90%). This scoring system can prioritize patients for emergent cholecystectomy based on their expected pathology.