International Consensus Guidelines for Risk Factors in Chronic Pancreatitis. Recommendations
from the working group for the international consensus guidelines for chronic pancreatitis
in collaboration with the International Association of Pancreatology, the American
Pancreatic Association, the Japan Pancreas Society, and European Pancreatic Club
Chronic pancreatitis (CP) is a complex inflammatory disease with remarkably impaired
quality of life and permanent damage of the pancreas. This paper is part of the international
consensus guidelines on CP and presents the consensus on factors elevating the risk
for CP.An international working group with 20 experts on CP from the major pancreas
societies (IAP, APA, JPS, and EPC) evaluated 14 statements generated from evidence
on four questions deemed to be the most clinically relevant in CP. The Grading of
Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach was used
to evaluate the level of evidence available per statement. To determine the level
of agreement, the working group voted on the 14 statements for strength of agreement,
using a nine-point Likert scale in order to calculate Cronbach's alpha reliability
coefficient.Strong consensus and agreement were obtained for the following statements:
Alcohol, smoking, and certain genetic alterations are risk factors for CP. Past history,
family history, onset of symptoms, and life-style factors including alcohol intake
and smoking history should be determined. Alcohol consumption dose-dependently elevates
the risk of CP up to 4-fold. Ever smokers, even smoking less than a pack of cigarettes
per day, have an increased risk for CP, as compared to never smokers.Both genetic
and environmental factors can markedly elevate the risk for CP. Therefore, health-promoting
lifestyle education and in certain cases genetic counselling should be employed to
reduce the incidence of CP.