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Frequency, Predisposing Factors, and Clinical Outcome of Azathioprine-Induced Pancreatitis Among Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Tuğçe Eşkazan, Selma Bozcan, Kadri Atay, Süleyman Yıldırım, Nurhan Demir, Sinem Çelik, Murat Tuncer, İbrahim Hatemı, Aykut Ferhat Çelık, Yusuf Erzın

2021Pancreas10 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to identify the frequency of azathioprine-induced acute pancreatitis (AZA-AP) and related factors. METHODS: Seven hundred eighty-seven inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients on AZA therapy were retrospectively analyzed. Azathioprine-induced AP was diagnosed with positive imaging and/or an at least 3-fold increased amylase level, in presence of typical abdominal pain. The AZA-AP group was compared with patients on AZA therapy with no history of pancreatitis and 4 numerical adjacent cases with the same diagnosis were selected (group B). RESULTS: Fifty-four patients developed gastrointestinal symptoms (6.9%); however, only half of them (26 of 54) had pancreatitis, except 1, all within the first 2 months under AZA. When the AZA-AP group was compared with group B, only budesonide usage and active smoking were significantly more common in group A (46.2% vs 25%, P = 0.034, and 77% vs 51%, P = 0.017, respectively). Active smoking was the only independent risk factor for AZA-AP development (odds ratio, 3.208 [95% confidence interval, 1.192-8.632]). CONCLUSIONS: All IBD patients developed AZA-AP nearly all within the first 2 months. Azathioprine intolerance may be a hidden diagnosis in at least half of the patients with AZA-AP symptoms. All smoker IBD patients should be monitored closely for AZA-AP development.

Topics & Concepts

AzathioprineMedicineInternal medicineGastroenterologyOdds ratioInflammatory bowel diseasePancreatitisAcute pancreatitisUlcerative colitisAbdominal painRisk factorConfidence intervalCrohn's diseaseDiseasePancreatitis Pathology and TreatmentMicroscopic ColitisInflammatory Bowel Disease