This study aims to understand how different treatment approaches for acute gallbladder inflammation (acute calculous cholecystitis) affect patient outcomes in real-world hospital settings. Acute calculous cholecystitis is a common condition that occurs when gallstones block the gallbladder and cause infection or inflammation. In more severe cases, patients may develop organ dysfunction, and doctors must decide quickly how best to treat the condition. Treatment options include early surgery to remove the gallbladder, placement of a drainage tube, or treatment with antibiotics alone. The best approach is not always clear, especially for patients who are older, have other medical conditions, or are very unwell. This study will collect information from hospitals around the world about how patients with severe gallbladder inflammation are treated as part of their usual care. No treatments are assigned by the study. All decisions are made by the patient's clinical team. The goal is to compare outcomes between different treatment approaches in patients who could reasonably receive more than one option. The study will examine recovery, survival, need for additional procedures, and time spent in the hospital over 90 days. The findings are intended to help doctors and patients better understand which treatment strategies may lead to better outcomes in different clinical situations, and to improve decision-making in emergency surgical care.
SnapChole is an international, multicenter, prospective, time-bound observational platform study designed to evaluate management strategies and outcomes in adults with acute calculous cholecystitis. The study focuses on patients with severe disease, defined by the presence of organ dysfunction, in whom treatment decisions are influenced by both patient-level factors and system-level capability. The study is conducted as a prospective clinical audit using routinely collected data and does not alter patient care. Participating centers enroll consecutive eligible patients during a predefined local accrual window. Data are recorded contemporaneously using standardized case report forms and transferred in deidentified form to a central coordinating database. Follow-up extends to 90 days from the index presentation. The study architecture separates descriptive benchmarking from causal analysis. The full cohort provides a denominator population for characterization of treatment patterns, timing of interventions, and outcomes across centers and healthcare systems. Within this cohort, prespecified analytic subsets are defined at the point of clinical decision-making (time zero), corresponding to the moment at which the treating team determines that one or more management strategies are feasible. Comparative analyses are structured to align eligibility, treatment assignment, and follow-up, consistent with a target trial emulation framework applied to observational data. Treatment strategies of interest include early cholecystectomy, gallbladder drainage as an initial approach, and antimicrobial-only management. Analyses are restricted to patients in whom the relevant strategies are simultaneously available, in order to reduce bias arising from differences in clinical eligibility or institutional capability. Exposure is defined as completion of the assigned management strategy within a prespecified interval following the decision point, reflecting real-world delivery of care. Outcomes include days alive and out of hospital at 90 days, mortality, need for additional interventions, and time to achieved source control. The study also incorporates complementary analyses, including benchmarking of care pathways, evaluation of patient-centered outcomes, and assessment of factors influencing clinical decision-making. Together, these components are intended to provide a comprehensive understanding of how management strategies are selected and how they relate to outcomes in severe acute calculous cholecystitis.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,500
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Days alive and out of hospital at 90 days
Number of days the participant is alive and not hospitalized during the 90 days following time zero, defined as the attending surgeon-level decision point at which treatment strategy is assigned. Higher values indicate better recovery.
Time frame: 90 days from time zero (attending surgeon-level decision point)
All-cause mortality
Death from any cause within the specified follow-up period after time zero, defined as the attending surgeon-level decision point at which treatment strategy is assigned.
Time frame: 90 days from time zero
Failure of Source Control
Persistent or recurrent sepsis requiring escalation of intervention, including conversion to surgery, additional drainage procedures, or reoperation following the initial management strategy.
Time frame: Within 90 days from time zero
Unplanned biliary reintervention
Any unplanned procedural intervention related to biliary disease, including repeat drainage, operative intervention, or endoscopic procedures following the initial management strategy.
Time frame: within 90 days of time zero
Length of hospital stay
Total duration of the index hospital admission measured from admission to discharge.
Time frame: From hospital admission to hospital discharge, assessed up to 90 days from time zero
Time to achieved source control
Elapsed time from time zero to completion of the definitive source-control intervention, including surgical or drainage procedures.
Time frame: From time zero to completion of source-control intervention, assessed up to 90 days
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