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AJR 2004; 183:1261-1265
© American Roentgen Ray Society

A Modified CT Severity Index for Evaluating Acute Pancreatitis: Improved Correlation with Patient Outcome

Koenraad J. Mortele1, Walter Wiesner1, Lisa Intriere1, Shridhar Shankar1, Kelly H. Zou1,2, Babek N. Kalantari1, Alex Perez3, Eric vanSonnenberg1, Pablo R. Ros1, Peter A. Banks3 and Stuart G. Silverman1

1 Department of Radiology, Division of Abdominal Imaging and Intervention, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis St., Boston, MA 02115.
2 Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115.
3 Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115.

OBJECTIVE. This study was conducted to assess the correlation with patient outcome and interobserver variability of a modified CT severity index in the evaluation of patients with acute pancreatitis compared with the currently accepted CT severity index.

MATERIALS AND METHODS. Of 266 consecutive patients diagnosed with acute pancreatitis during a 1-year period, 66 underwent contrast-enhanced MDCT within 1 week of the onset of symptoms. Three radiologists who were blinded to patient outcome independently scored the severity of the pancreatitis using both the currently accepted and modified CT severity indexes. The modified index included a simplified assessment of pancreatic inflammation and necrosis as well as an assessment of extrapancreatic complications. Outcome parameters included the length of hospital stay; the need for surgery or percutaneous intervention; and the occurrences of infection, organ failure, and death. For both the current and modified indexes, correlation between the severity of the pancreatitis and patient outcome was estimated using the Wilcoxon's rank sum test and Fisher's exact test. Interobserver agreement for both indexes was calculated using the kappa statistic.

RESULTS. When applying the modified index, the severity of pancreatitis and the following parameters correlated more closely than when the currently accepted index was applied: the length of the hospital stay (0-34 days) (modified index [p = 0.0054-0.0714] vs current index [p = 0.0052-0.3008]); the need for surgical or percutaneous procedures (10/66 patients) (modified index [p = 0.0112] vs current index [p = 0.0324]); and the occurrence of infection (21/66 patients) (modified index [p < 1e-10] vs current index [p < 1e-04]). Significant correlation between the severity of pancreatitis and the development of organ failure (9/66 patients) was seen only using the modified index (p = 0.0024), not the current index (p = 0.0513). The interobserver agreement was similar with the modified ({kappa} range, 0.71-0.85) and the current ({kappa} range, 0.63-0.86) indexes.

CONCLUSION. The modified CT severity index correlates more closely with patient outcome measures than the currently accepted CT severity index, with similar interobserver variability.


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