Abstract.
Although acute cholecystitis (AC) in many centers is routinely treated by laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC), the outcome of LC for AC in geriatric patients (75 years or more) remains almost unstudied.
All 32 geriatric patients undergoing a cholecystectomy for histologically proven AC in a teaching hospital during a six-year period were studied retrospectively.
Median preoperative duration of symptoms was eight days and median preoperative hospital stay was six days. Preoperative ERCP was performed in 22 patients with successful sphincterotomy and common bile duct (CBD) stone retrieval in 11 patients. Overall twelve patients (37%) had CBD stones and 14 patients (44%) had gangrenous cholecystitis at operation. Twenty-seven patients underwent a LC with a conversion rate of 26%, a complication rate of 41% and a mortality rate of 3.7%. Five patients were judged unstable for a laparoscopic approach and underwent a straight open cholecystectomy. Although the latter were at higher risk (higher APACHE II scores), their outcome except for longer intensive care unit stays, was not different from laparoscopically treated patients.
Lack of superiority of laparoscopic over open cholecystectomy in the present study seemed due to clinical characteristics of AC in geriatric patients which may lead to late diagnosis and treatment. Preoperative ERCP by further delaying surgery may contribute to loose any potential benefit of an early laparoscopic procedure. The place of preoperative ERCP and the timing of LC in geriatric patients with AC therefore may need to be redefined.