The natural history of diverticular disease of the colon: a role for antibiotics in preventing complications? A retrospective study.

1994 
: Medical and surgical treatment of diverticular disease has to be set against a background of incomplete knowledge of the natural history and geographical differences of the disease, and difficulties in its definition and classification. This clinical retrospective study was performed to answer the following questions: 1) what was the clinical course after an episode of acute diverticulitis, obliging to an hospital admission? 2) what was the role of cyclic course of antibiotics, if any, in reducing the risk of complications? We examined all admissions to the surgical ward from 1967 to 1991 for a complication of diverticular disease: we looked for occlusion, perforation, fistula, or bleeding. Patients not operated with diverticular disease have been divided in 2 groups, that is patients with a medical prescription at the end of hospital period, and patients admitted without a drug prescription. All patients have been prescribed bulk agents. The medical prescription included monthly cycles of 1 week of oral antibiotics (Neomycin associated with Bacitracin, Paromomycin, or 1989 Rifaximin). We looked for the natural history of the disease in the 2 groups (the "drug" group and the "no drug" group) after the first admission, that is the development of new complications of the diverticular disease and the reason for readmissions, calculating the Absolute Risk Reduction (the difference in event rates between the treatment and control groups) and the Relative Risk Reduction (the difference in event rates between the treated and control groups, divided by the event rate in the control groups). The total number of admitted patients in the period 1967-1991 was 505. A statistically significant trend in favour of a risk reduction of new admissions in the group given antibiotics seems evident.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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