15 research outputs found

    A clinical feasible method for computed tomography-based assessment of sarcopenia In patients with chronic pancreatitis

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    OBJECTIVES: Sarcopenia is a serious but often overlooked complication of chronic pancreatitis (CP). We investigated the prevalence and risk factors for sarcopenia in patients with CP and determined the utility of a computed tomography (CT)-based method, based on psoas muscle measurements, for easy and clinical feasible diagnosis of sarcopenia. METHODS: This was a retrospective multicenter study of 265 patients with CP. We used segmentation of CT images to quantify skeletal muscle mass and diagnose sarcopenia. On the same CT image as used for muscle segmentation, psoas muscle thickness and cross-sectional area were measured and receiver operating characteristic analyses defined age and sex-specific cutoffs for diagnosing sarcopenia. RESULTS: The prevalence of sarcopenia was 20.4%. The optimal height-adjusted psoas muscle cross-sectional area cutoff for diagnosing sarcopenia was 3.3 cm/m in males and 2.5 cm/m in females. The corresponding area under the receiver operating characteristic curves were 0.8 and 0.9, with sensitivities of 84% and 81% and specificities of 62% and 81%, respectively. Comparable diagnostic performance characteristics were observed for psoas muscle thickness. CONCLUSIONS: Sarcopenia is present in 1 of 5 patients with CP. Assessment of psoas muscle parameters provides a clinical feasible method to diagnose sarcopenia

    Pancreatic calcifications associate with diverse aetiological risk factors in patients with chronic pancreatitis:A multicentre study of 1500 cases

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    Background Pancreatic calcifications is a common finding in patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP), but the underlying pathophysiology is incompletely understood. Past studies for risk factors of calcifications have generally been focused on single parameters or limited by small sample sizes. The aim of this study was to explore several patient and disease characteristics and their associations with pancreatic calcifications in a large cohort of CP patients with diverse aetiological risk factors. Methods This was a multicentre, cross-sectional study including 1509 patients with CP. Patient and disease characteristics were compared for patients with calcifications (n = 912) vs. without calcifications (n = 597). Multivariable logistic regression was performed to assess the parameters independently associated with calcifications. Results The mean age of patients was 53.9 ± 14.5 years and 1006 (67%) were men. The prevalence of calcifications was 60.4% in the overall patient cohort, but highly variable between patients with different aetiological risk factors (range: 2–69%). On multivariate analysis, alcoholic aetiology (OR 1.76 [95% CI, 1.39–2.24]; p < 0.001) and smoking aetiology (OR 1.77 [95% CI, 1.39–2.26], p < 0.001) were positively associated with the presence of calcifications, while an autoimmune aetiology was negatively associated with calcifications (OR 0.15 [95% CI, 0.08–0.27], p < 0.001). Patients with pancreatic calcifications were more likely to have undergone pancreatic duct stenting (OR 1.59 [95%CI, 1.16–2.19], p = 0.004). Conclusion The presence of pancreatic calcifications is associated with diverse aetiological risk factors in patients with CP. This observation attest to the understanding of CP as a complex disease and may have implications for disease classification
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