Endosonographic Criteria Chronic Pancreatitis

Endosonographic Criteria Chronic Pancreatitis

Alexander Hann, Alexander Meining

This article provides an overview of the scoring systems commonly used for diagnosing chronic pancreatitis by means of endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS), and for classifying the degree of severity of the condition. On EUS, the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis is based on assessment of the duct and also the parenchyma. The “nine classic criteria” listed in Table 1 can be diagnosed [1]. Intraparenchymal calcifications and pancreatic duct stones are highly specific criteria. In the absence of these types of pathology, only the simultaneous occurrence of four or more of the other criteria is consistent with chronic pancreatitis [2]. Several of the criteria may also be observed in the general population without any underlying disease in the organ [3]. The findings are influenced by age and by alcohol and cigarette consumption. If only two or fewer criteria are present, chronic pancreatitis is unlikely [4]. When a diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis is established using EUS, it is particularly important for the report on the findings to document each criterion tested, in order to substantiate that a complete examination has been carried out [5,6].

Table 1 Nine classic criteria for establishing a diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis on EUS

Parenchyma Duct
Hyperechoic foci with and without shadows Stones in the duct
Echo-dense septa Irregular duct
Cysts Dilated side ducts
Honeycomb-like lobulation Dilated main duct
Hyperechoic contours on the main duct

The Rosemont classification (Tables 2 and 3) is another system that is used to diagnose chronic pancreatitis with EUS. In contrast to the nine classic criteria, this system uses major and minor criteria to establish the diagnosis [7]. Despite this weighting of the criteria, however, no benefit in comparison with the classic criteria has yet been demonstrated [8,9].

Table 2 Rosemont criteria for establishing a diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis [7]

Parenchyma Duct
Hyperechoic foci with acoustic shadows (major A); body/tail Stones in the duct (major A)
Honeycomb-like lobulation (major B); body/tail Irregular duct (minor); body/tail
Lobulation without honeycombing (minor); body/tail Dilated side ducts (minor); body/tail
Hyperechoic foci without acoustic shadows (minor); body/tail Dilated main duct (minor); body/tail
Cysts (minor) Hyperechoic contours on the main duct (minor); body/tail
Echo-dense septa (minor); body/tail

Table 3 Interpretation of the Rosemont criteria

Assessment Criteria
Definitive CP 1 major A + ≥ 3 minor 1 major A + 1 major B 2 major A
Suspected CP 1 major A + < 3 minor 1 major B + ≥ 3 minor ≥ 5 minor
Possible CP 3 oder 4 minor, no major Major B +/- < 3 minor
Normal <3 minor*,no major
CP, chronic pancreatitis. * With the exception of hyperechoic foci without acoustic shadows, cysts, dilated main duct and dilated side ducts.
The above systems make it possible to assess the likelihood that chronic pancreatitis is present, but do not allow any assessment of the severity of the disease. The Cambridge classification [10], initially developed using endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), is used to assess severity (Table 4). The EUS criteria used here are almost identical with the “classic criteria.” However, the ductal and parenchymal changes are not viewed separately from one another, and instead it is the combination of pathologies that is used to assess the degree of severity.

Table 4 Cambridge classification for assessing the degree of severity of chronic pancreatitis on EUS

Class Criteria
Cambridge 0 None
Cambridge 1 Lobulated texture with honeycombing, duct < 3 mm
Cambridge 2 Hyperechoic duct, hyperechoic foci, echo-dense contour, duct < 3 mm
Cambridge 3 Honeycomb lobulation, septated, hyperechoic foci, duct &bt; 3 mm, irregular duct, no ductal stones
Cambridge 4 As 3, plus calcifications, ductal stones, and cysts

Images of pathological conditions seen on EUS in patients with chronic pancreatitis, and classification of the findings using the Cambridge classification

Parenchyma Duct
Hyperechoic foci with and without shadows (Cambridge 4) Ductal stones (Cambridge 4)
Echo-dense septa (Cambridge 2) Dilated, irregular duct (Cambridge 4 with additional parenchymal calcifications)
Cysts (Cambridge 4) Hyperechoic contour on the main duct, hyperechoic foci (Cambridge 2)
Honeycomb-like lobulation (Cambridge 2)
 

References

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  7. Catalano MF, Sahai A, Levy M, Romagnuolo J, Wiersema M, Brugge W, et al. EUS-based criteria for the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis: the Rosemont classification. Gastrointest Endosc. 2009 Jun;69(7):1251–61.
  8. Stevens T, Lopez R, Adler DG, Al-Haddad MA, Conway J, Dewitt JM, et al. Multicenter comparison of the interobserver agreement of standard EUS scoring and Rosemont classification scoring for diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis. Gastrointest Endosc. 2010 Mar;71(3):519–26.
  9. Jimeno-Ayllón C, Pérez-García JI, Gómez-Ruiz CJ, García-Cano-Lizcano J, Morillas-Ariño J, Martínez-Fernández R, et al. Standard criteria versus Rosemont classification for EUS-diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis. Rev Espanola Enfermedades Dig Organo Of Soc Espanola Patol Dig. 2011 Dec;103(12):626–31.
  10. Axon AT, Classen M, Cotton PB, Cremer M, Freeny PC, Lees WR. Pancreatography in chronic pancreatitis: international definitions. Gut. 1984 Oct;25(10):1107–12.

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