Pediatric Drug-Associated Pancreatitis Reveals Concomitant Risk Factors and Poor Reliability of Causality Scoring: Report From INSPPIRE

  • Veronique D. Morinville
  • , Sohail Z. Husain
  • , Fuchenchu Wang
  • , Gretchen A. Cress
  • , Maisam Abu-El-Haija
  • , Ankur Chugh
  • , Elissa Downs
  • , Kate Ellery
  • , Douglas S. Fishman
  • , Alvin Jay Freeman
  • , Cheryl E. Gariepy
  • , Matthew Giefer
  • , Tanja Gonska
  • , Quin Liu
  • , Asim Maqbool
  • , Jacob Mark
  • , Brian Arthur Mcferron
  • , Megha Mehta
  • , Jaimie D. Nathan
  • , Ken Ng
  • Chee Y. Ooi, Emily Perito, Wenly Ruan, Sarah Jane Schwarzenberg, Zachary M. Sellers, Jose Serrano, David M. Troendle, Michael Wilschanski, Yuhua Zheng, Ying Yuan, Mark Lowe, Aliye Uc

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objectives: Drug-associated acute pancreatitis (DAP) studies typically focus on single acute pancreatitis (AP) cases. We aimed to analyze the (1) characteristics, (2) co-risk factors, and (3) reliability of the Naranjo scoring system for DAP using INSPPIRE-2 (the INternational Study group of Pediatric Pancreatitis: In search for a cuRE-2) cohort study of acute recurrent pancreatitis (ARP) and chronic pancreatitis (CP) in children. Methods: Data were obtained from ARP group with ≥1 episode of DAP and CP group with medication exposure ± DAP. Physicians could report multiple risk factors. Pancreatitis associated with Medication (Med) (ARP+CP) was compared to Non-Medication cases, and ARP-Med vs CP-Med groups. Naranjo score was calculated for each DAP episode. Results: Of 726 children, 392 had ARP and 334 had CP; 51 children (39 ARP and 12 CP) had ≥1 AP associated with a medication; 61% had ≥1 AP without concurrent medication exposure. The Med group had other risk factors present (where tested): 10 of 35 (28.6%) genetic, 1 of 48 (2.1%) autoimmune pancreatitis, 13 of 51 (25.5%) immune-mediated conditions, 11 of 50 (22.0%) obstructive/anatomic, and 28 of 51 (54.9%) systemic risk factors. In Med group, 24 of 51 (47%) had involvement of >1 medication, simultaneously or over different AP episodes. There were 20 ARP and 4 CP cases in "probable" category and 19 ARP and 7 CP in "possible" category by Naranjo scores. Conclusions: Medications were involved in 51 of 726 (7%) of ARP or CP patients in INSPPIRE-2 cohort; other pancreatitis risk factors were present in most, suggesting a potential additive role of different risks. The Naranjo scoring system failed to identify any cases as "definitive," raising questions about its reliability for DAP.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)540-546
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition
Volume77
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2023

Keywords

  • Naranjo
  • acute pancreatitis
  • acute recurrent pancreatitis
  • anatomy
  • autoimmune
  • children
  • chronic pancreatitis
  • drug-induced
  • environmental
  • genetic
  • medication
  • systemic

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