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Management Practices and Predictors of Outcome of Liver Abscess in Adults: A Series of 1630 Patients from a Liver Unit.

BACKGROUND: The management practices of liver abscess (LA) have evolved over time. The precise diagnosis of etiology and complications is pivotal for appropriate management.

METHODS: Descriptive analyses of consecutive patients treated for LA using electronic medical records at a liver unit between years 2010 and 2020 and investigate relationships between clinical, imaging, laboratory and microbiological findings, treatment strategies and mortality.

RESULTS: Of 1630 LA patients, the most common aetiologies were amoebic liver abscess (ALA; 81%) and pyogenic liver abscess (PLA; 10.3%, mainly related to biliary disease and/or obstruction). Abdominal pain (86%) and fever (85.3%) were the commonest presenting symptoms (median duration-10 days). Almost 10% had jaundice at presentation, 31.1% were diabetic, 35.5% had chronic alcohol use and 3.3% had liver cirrhosis. Nearly 54% LA were solitary, 77.7% localized to the right liver lobe (most commonly segment VII/VIII). Patients with large LA (>10 cm, 11.9%) had more frequent jaundice and abscess rupture (p-0.01). Compared with ALA, patients with PLA were older, more often had multiple and bilobar abscesses with local complications. Over four-fifth of the patients received percutaneous interventions (catheter drainage [PCD; 36.1%] alone and needle aspiration [PNA] plus PCD [34.1%] as most common). Fifty-eight patients underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiography for intrabiliary abscess rupture (n = 36) or cholangitic abscess (n = 22). The median duration of hospital stay and PCD were 7 (4-10) days and 5 (4-8 days), respectively. The overall in-hospital mortality was 1.1%. Presence of septic encephalopathy (HR: 20.8; 95% CI: 1.9-220.7; p-0.012), liver cirrhosis (HR: 20.1; 95% CI: 2.7-146.9; p-0.003) and jaundice (HR: 7.6; 95% CI:1.7-33.1; p-0.006) were independent predictors of mortality.

CONCLUSIONS: The commonest presentation was middle age male with right lobe solitary ALA. Patients with large, bilobar and/or pyogenic abscess had more complications. Nearly 70% patients require percutaneous interventions, which if given early improve treatment outcomes. Presence of jaundice, liver cirrhosis and septic encephalopathy were independent predictors of mortality.

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