- Schwarzenberg, Sarah Jane;
- Bellin, Melena;
- Husain, Sohail Z;
- Ahuja, Monika;
- Barth, Bradley;
- Davis, Heather;
- Durie, Peter R;
- Fishman, Douglas S;
- Freedman, Steven D;
- Gariepy, Cheryl E;
- Giefer, Matthew J;
- Gonska, Tanja;
- Heyman, Melvin B;
- Himes, Ryan;
- Kumar, Soma;
- Morinville, Veronique D;
- Lowe, Mark E;
- Nuehring, Neil E;
- Ooi, Chee Y;
- Pohl, John F;
- Troendle, David;
- Werlin, Steven L;
- Wilschanski, Michael;
- Yen, Elizabeth;
- Uc, Aliye
Objective
To determine the clinical presentation, diagnostic variables, risk factors, and disease burden in children with chronic pancreatitis.Study design
We performed a cross-sectional study of data from the International Study Group of Pediatric Pancreatitis: In Search for a Cure, a registry of children with acute recurrent pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis. Between-group differences were compared using Wilcoxon rank-sum test.Results
Among 170 subjects in the registry, 76 (45%) had chronic pancreatitis; 57% were female, 80% were white; median age at diagnosis was 9.9 years. Pancreatitis-predisposing genetic mutations were identified in 51 (67%) and obstructive risk factors in 25 (33%). Toxic/metabolic and autoimmune factors were uncommon. Imaging demonstrated ductal abnormalities and pancreatic atrophy more commonly than calcifications. Fifty-nine (77%) reported abdominal pain within the past year; pain was reported as constant and receiving narcotics in 28%. Children with chronic pancreatitis reported a median of 3 emergency department visits and 2 hospitalizations in the last year. Forty-seven subjects (70%) missed 1 day of school in the past month as the result of chronic pancreatitis; 26 (34%) missed 3 or more days. Children reporting constant pain were more likely to miss school (P = .002), visit the emergency department (P = .01), and experience hospitalizations (P = .03) compared with children with episodic pain. Thirty-three children (43%) underwent therapeutic endoscopic retrograde pancreatography; one or more pancreatic surgeries were performed in 30 (39%).Conclusions
Chronic pancreatitis occurs at a young age with distinct clinical features. Genetic and obstructive risk factors are common, and disease burden is substantial.