Abstract
This a retrospective study of 19 patients presenting with chronic pancreatitis and
benign stenosis of the common bile duct, who were followed up for periods ranging
from 13 months to 48 months after biliary stenting (average 18 months). There were
18 men and one woman, aged between 38 and 65 years (average 49 years). The mean duration
of the disease before stenting was seven years (range 1-25 years). Symptoms were present
in ten patients: obstructive jaundice in four cases, cholangitis in three cases, and
biliary colic in three cases. Nine patients without clinical complaints presented
with chronic cholestasis. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) showed
15 long, regular stenoses of the intrapancreatic course of the common bile duct, three
short stenoses located at the upper margin of the head of the pancreas, and one bilary
stenosis associated with peripheral compression by a cyst of the head of the pancreas.
Forty endoscopic biliary stenting procedures were performed in the 19 patients over
a six-year period. Successful insertion of the prosthesis was achieved in 39 cases.
Two complications occurred: one duodenal ulceration and one stent migration into the
bile duct. The mean duration of biliary stenting was ten months. Only two patients
(10 %) had complete clinical, biological, and radiological recovery. Complete failure
of biliary stenting was observed in six patients (31 %). Eleven patients (59 %) had
partial results: six (31 %) had biological improvement although the biliary stricture
persisted, and five were clinically asymptomatic but had cholestasis, and still presented
with biliary stenosis in four cases.
Biliary stenting of benign biliary strictures complicating chronic calcifying pancreatitis
seems to be only a temporary treatment, except perhaps for short, localized biliary
strictures. Because of the low morbidity rate and the rare failure of stent insertion,
it can be a transition therapy for inoperable patients or for those awaiting a sufficient
dilation of the main pancreatic duct allowing the performance of surgery with both
biliary and pancreatic digestive diversion.