Seek specialist advice
Surgery may be considered if ERCP demonstrates localised chronic pancreatitis or focal lesions, e.g. calculi; it may also be considered for intractable pain, pancreatic cysts and pseudocysts, and recurrent gastrointestinal haemorrhage.
Options include:
- cholecystectomy with clearance of duct stones - essential if gallstones present
 - sphincterotomy of the accessory papilla in patients with pancreas divisum
 - drainage - percutaneous or surgical drainage of a pseudocyst or abscess
- surgical (laparoscopic or open) drainage of pseudocysts that need intervention should be considered if endoscopic therapy is unsuitable or has failed (1)
 
 - partial resection - body and tail may be resected if pathology is limited to them. In other patients, a Whipple's procedure may be necessary
 - pancreatic duct obstruction (1)
- surgery (open or minimally invasive) should be considered as first-line treatment in adults with painful chronic pancreatitis that is causing obstruction of the main pancreatic duct
 - consider extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy for adults with pancreatic duct obstruction caused by a dominant stone if surgery is unsuitable
 
 - pancreatic ascites and pleural effusion (1)
- consider referring a person with pancreatic ascites and pleural effusion for management in a specialist pancreatic centre
 
 - total pancreatectomy - total pancreatectomy has been considered a treatment of last resort because it leads to development of postoperative "brittle diabetes"
- however, advances such as improved autologous islet cell transplantation have resulted in more-frequent use of total pancreatectomy in patients with disabling symptoms whose pancreatic morphology is not conducive to resection or decompressive surgery
 
 
References:
- NICE. Pancreatitis. NICE guideline NG104. Published September 2018, last updated December 2020
 - Dominguez-Munoz JE, Drewes AM, Lindkvist B, et al. Recommendations from the United European Gastroenterology evidence-based guidelines for the diagnosis and therapy of chronic pancreatitis. Pancreatology. 2018 Dec;18(8):847-54.
 - Garcea G et al. Total pancreatectomy with and without islet cell transplantation for chronic pancreatitis: A series of 85 consecutive patients. Pancreas 2009 Jan; 38:1