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Abstract

Background

The Parkland Grading Scale for Cholecystitis (PGS) was developed as an intraoperative grading scale to stratify gallbladder (GB) disease severity during laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC). We aimed to prospectively validate this scale as a measure of LC outcomes.

Methods

Eleven surgeons took pictures of and prospectively graded the initial view of 317 GBs using PGS while performing LC (LIVE) between 9/2016 and 3/2017. Three independent surgeon raters retrospectively graded these saved GB images (STORED). The Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) statistic assessed rater reliability. Fisher's Exact, Jonckheere-Terpstra, or ANOVA tested association between peri-operative data and gallbladder grade.

Results

ICC between LIVE and STORED PGS grades demonstrated excellent reliability (ICC = 0.8210). Diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, difficulty of surgery, incidence of partial and open cholecystectomy rates, pre-op WBC, length of operation, and bile leak rates all significantly increased with increasing grade.

Conclusions

PGS is a highly reliable, simple, operative based scale that can accurately predict outcomes after LC.

Table of contents summary

The Parkland Grading Scale for Cholecystitis was found to be a reliable and accurate predictor of laparoscopic cholecystectomy outcomes. Diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, surgical difficulty, incidence of partial and open cholecystectomy rates, pre-op WBC, operation length, and bile leak rates all significantly increased with increasing grade.

Details

Title
Prospective validation of the Parkland Grading Scale for Cholecystitis
Author
Madni, Tarik D 1 ; Nakonezny, Paul A 2 ; Barrios, Evan 3 ; Imran, Jonathan B 1 ; Clark, Audra T 1 ; Taveras, Luis 1 ; Cunningham, Holly B 1 ; Christie, Alana 2 ; Eastman, Alexander L 3 ; Minshall, Christian T 3 ; Luk, Stephen 3 ; Minei, Joseph P 3 ; Phelan, Herb A 3 ; Cripps, Michael W 3 

 UT Southwestern Department of Surgery, Dallas, TX, USA 
 UT Southwestern Department of Clinical Sciences, Division of Biostatistics, Dallas, TX, USA 
 UT Southwestern Division of General and Acute Care Surgery, Dallas, TX, USA 
Pages
90-97
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Jan 2019
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
00029610
e-ISSN
18791883
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2151172173
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Jan 2019