Case 1
A 23-year-old woman was evaluated in clinic for diabetic gastroparesis. At the time
of our evaluation, she was symptomatic despite a regimen consisting of domperidone,
esomeprazole, ondansetron, duloxetine, and promethazine. Previous attempts using erythromycin
and metoclopramide were both unsuccessful and limited by side effects. She continued
to undergo frequent hospitalization, with four admissions to our facility plus numerous
admissions to her local hospital. A 4-hour solid state gastric emptying scintigraphy
study revealed only 47 % emptying at 4 hours. Gastric stimulation was declined by
her insurance company and she therefore proceeded with transpyloric stent placement
([Fig. 1 a – c]).
Fig. 1 Placement of self-expandable metallic stent across the pyloric channel. a The delivery system is placed across the pylorus. b The stent is deployed under endoscopic guidance without fluoroscopy and with the
aid of the yellow endoscopic marker at the proximal end of the stent. c The stent is fully deployed in the transpylori position with its proximal end in
the gastric antrum.
The patient reported complete resolution of her daily morning nausea and cessation
of all vomiting after stent placement. Her repeat 4-hour solid-state gastric scintigraphy,
obtained 1 month after stent placement, was normal with 93 % emptying at 4 hours.
Approximately 1 month after placement she developed recurrent symptoms in the context
of stent migration that resolved after stent removal and replacement. She remains
well 115 days after stent placement.
Case 2
A 15-year-old boy was referred with chronic nausea and vomiting. A 4-hour solid gastric
scintigraphy was markedly abnormal and notable with 46 % retention at 4 hours. Trials
of erythromycin, metoclopramide, domperidone, and promethazine were unsuccessful.
Following discussions, he underwent transpyloric stent placement and immediately noted
marked improvement following the procedure. A repeat 4-hour gastric scintigraphy study
was markedly improved with normal emptying parameters at 1 and 2 hours and mildly
abnormal emptying (11 % retention) at the 4-hour measurement. The patient remains
well 122 days after stent placement.
Case 3
A 45-year-old man was referred for management of idiopathic gastroparesis. His main
symptoms included early satiety and chronic nausea. A 90-minute gastric emptying study
at another center had reported only 12 % emptying at 90 minutes, with an estimated
gastric emptying half-time of over 400 minutes. Previous medical trials of erythromycin,
metoclopramide, and domperidone were not successful at sufficiently alleviating his
symptoms. He underwent transpyloric stent placement. Subsequently, he had complete
symptom resolution and has been able to eat ad lib without nausea or early satiety.
A repeat gastric emptying scintigraphy obtained at the same center as the original
test was normal and showed 33 % emptying at 60 minutes, 59 % emptying at 90 minutes,
and a calculated emptying half-time of 77 minutes. The patient remains asymptomatic
174 days after stent placement.
All placed stents were the double-layered fully-covered Niti-S self-expandable metallic
stent (TaeWoong Medical, Seoul, Korea). Our data suggest that transpyloric stent placement
improves symptoms associated with impaired gastric emptying as well as intrinsically
improving emptying parameters.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_TTT_1AO_2AZ