Tokyo Guidelines 2018: diagnostic criteria and severity grading of acute cholangitis (with videos)

Seiki Kiriyama(Ogaki Municipal Hospital), Kazuto Kozaka(Kanazawa University), Tadahiro Takada(Teikyo University), Steven M. Strasberg(Washington University in St. Louis), Henry A. Pitt(Temple University), Toshifumi Gabata(Kanazawa University Hospital), Jiro Hata(Kawasaki Medical School), Kui‐Hin Liau(National University of Singapore), Fumihiko Miura(Teikyo University), Akihiko Horiguchi(Fujita Health University), Keng‐Hao Liu(Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital), Cheng‐Hsi Su(Cheng Hsin General Hospital), Keita Wada(Teikyo University), P. Jagannath(Lilavati Hospital & Research Centre), Takao Itoi(Tokyo Medical University Hospital), Dirk J. Gouma(Amsterdam UMC Location University of Amsterdam), Yasuhisa Mori(Kyushu University), Shuntaro Mukai(Tokyo Medical University Hospital), Mariano Giménez(Universidad de Buenos Aires), Wayne Shih‐Wei Huang(Chang Bing Show Chwan Memorial Hospital), Myung‐Hwan Kim(Ulsan College), Kohji Okamoto(Kitakyushu City Hospital Organization), Giulio Belli(Ospedale Santa Maria di Loreto Nuovo), Christos Dervenis(Agia Olga Hospital), Angus C. W. Chan(Hong Kong Sanatorium and Hospital), Wan Yee Lau(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Itaru Endo(Yokohama City University), Harumi Gomi(University of Tsukuba), Masahiro Yoshida(Japan Association for Development of Community Medicine), Toshihiko Mayumi(University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan), Todd H. Baron(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Eduardo de Santibáñes(Universidad de Buenos Aires), Anthony Yuen Bun Teoh(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Tsann‐Long Hwang(Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital), Chen‐Guo Ker(Yuan's General Hospital), Miin‐Fu Chen(Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital), Ho‐Seong Han(Seoul National University Bundang Hospital), Yoo‐Seok Yoon(Seoul National University Bundang Hospital), In‐Seok Choi(Konyang University Hospital), Dong Sup Yoon(Yonsei University), Ryota Higuchi(Tokyo Women's Medical University), Seigo Kitano(Oita University), Masafumi Inomata(Oita University), Daniel J. Deziel(Rush University Medical Center), Eduard Jonas(University of Cape Town), Koichi Hirata(Hokkaido hospital), Yoshinobu Sumiyama(Toho University), Kazuo Inui(Fujita Health University), Masakazu Yamamoto(Yonsei University)
Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Sciences
October 15, 2017
Cited by 708Open Access
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Abstract

Although the diagnostic and severity grading criteria on the 2013 Tokyo Guidelines (TG13) are used worldwide as the primary standard for management of acute cholangitis (AC), they need to be validated through implementation and assessment in actual clinical practice. Here, we conduct a systematic review of the literature to validate the TG13 diagnostic and severity grading criteria for AC and propose TG18 criteria. While there is little evidence evaluating the TG13 criteria, they were validated through a large-scale case series study in Japan and Taiwan. Analyzing big data from this study confirmed that the diagnostic rate of AC based on the TG13 diagnostic criteria was higher than that based on the TG07 criteria, and that 30-day mortality in patients with a higher severity based on the TG13 severity grading criteria was significantly higher. Furthermore, a comparison of patients treated with early or urgent biliary drainage versus patients not treated this way showed no difference in 30-day mortality among patients with Grade I or Grade III AC, but significantly lower 30-day mortality in patients with Grade II AC who were treated with early or urgent biliary drainage. This suggests that the TG13 severity grading criteria can be used to identify Grade II patients whose prognoses may be improved through biliary drainage. The TG13 severity grading criteria may therefore be useful as an indicator for biliary drainage as well as a predictive factor when assessing the patient's prognosis. The TG13 diagnostic and severity grading criteria for AC can provide results quickly, are minimally invasive for the patients, and are inexpensive. We recommend that the TG13 criteria be adopted in the TG18 guidelines and used as standard practice in the clinical setting. Free full articles and mobile app of TG18 are available at: http://www.jshbps.jp/modules/en/index.php?content_id=47. Related clinical questions and references are also included.


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