Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health ()

Acute Pancreatitis: An Exploratory, Cross-sectional, Single-center Study of the Epidemiological Features of the Disease in a Sample of Saudi Patients

  • Abed Al Lehibi,
  • Mohammad Abdullah Wani,
  • Abdullah Al Mtawa,
  • Shameem Ahmad,
  • Tauseef Azhar,
  • Khalid Al Sayari,
  • Abdullah Al Khathlan,
  • Ahmad Al Eid,
  • Adel Qutub,
  • Ahmad Al Ghamdi,
  • Areej Al Balkhi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2991/jegh.k.190524.001

Abstract

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Epidemiological studies on Acute Pancreatitis (AP) are significantly negligible in the Saudi Arabian Literature. In this paper, we aim to explore the current trends of AP in a sample of Saudi patients. This is a cross-sectional study in which we reviewed AP-related admissions from 2014 to 2017. Data collected included demographics, clinical presentation, investigations, severity, complications, and the outcome at the end of hospitalization. During the study period, 107 patients were admitted due to AP. Fifty-seven (53%) were males. Biliary pancreatitis was the most common etiology found among our patients (39.3%; 95% CI: 30.5–48.7), followed by alcoholic pancreatitis (11.2%; 95% CI: 6.5–18.6) and hypertriglyceridemia (8%; 95% CI: 4.5–15.2). Pancreatic pseudocysts were the most common complication we found in this series (15%; 95% CI: 9.4–23). Of all the hospitalized patients in this study, eight patients (7.9%) died (95% CI: 3.8–14.1). The number of AP-related admissions and mortality rate appear to have increased as compared with the numbers in earlier national studies. The etiological groups have also changed. As compared with Western/Asian studies, however, there was almost no difference in the epidemiological patterns except for the mortality rate.

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