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DOI: 10.1055/s-0039-1681243
ANTEROGRADE BILIARY DRAINAGE AS SECOND STEP AFTER EUS HEPATICOGASTROSTOMY (ABD-HG) FOR MANAGING BENIGN BILIO-DIGESTIVE ANASTOMOTIC STRICTURES
Publication History
Publication Date:
18 March 2019 (online)
Introduction and aims:
Benign strictures of bilio-digestive anastomoses (ABDS) are classical complications after biliary surgery. We propose an approach in two consecutive steps:
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EUS-guided HG to create an access to the biliary tree;
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anterograde treatment of the stricture.
The objectives were to evaluate the feasibility, the safety, and the efficacy of this strategy.
Methods:
Monocentric retrospective study including patients with ABDS managed by ADB-HG. One month after the first step was scheduled an anterograde treatment being:
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anastomotic dilatation using 8 mm balloon + double pigtail stents (DPS) placement if the ABDS was crossed;
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anterograde cholangisocopy (+ electro-hydraulic lithotrity) in case of lithiasis.
Results:
12 patients (mean of 61 years) were included. Nine had a hepatico-jejunal stricture, 2 biliary stricture with duodenal occlusion, and one a posthepatectomy defect of the convergence. The symptoms were 50% of cholangitis, 50% of jaundice.
First step: the technical and clinical success were 100% (SEMS placement in 9 cases, DPS and/or naso-biliary drain in 2, and dilation + DPS in one case. There were 4 post-operative adverse events (3 cholangitis, 1 abscess) managed conservatively.
Second step: was done after 7 weeks average. The ABDS was crossed in 36.4%, allowing for dilation and DPS placement. In other cases (63.6%), hepatico-gastric stents were placed (4 DPS; 4 SEMS). Two patients had anterograde cholangioscopy with electro-hydaulic lithotrity for macrolithiasis (Video).
Then, a mean of 4.4 subsequent ambulatory endoscopies were performed, with final crossing and dilation of the ABDS in 75% (+DPS). There was no complication. In a mean follow-up of 100 weeks [12 – 213]. One patient had one dilatation without recurrence, the 11 others undergo stent exchanges every year and remain asymptomatic.
Conclusion:
The management of ABDS with this two-steps approach, allowed for stricture repermeabilization rate of 75% and constant clinical symptoms regression.
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