A 65-year old man with advanced pancreatic cancer with a combination of malignant
biliary obstruction and gastric outlet obstruction was referred to our hospital. Given
the presence of periampullary cancerous lesions, the endoscopic placement of a duodenal
stent and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided hepaticogastrostomy (HGS) were performed
simultaneously, using a single convex-array echoendoscope with a forward-oblique view
(EG-580T; Fujifilm, Tokyo, Japan; [Fig. 1]). A partially covered metal duodenal stent (Niti-S COMVI; Taewoong Medical, Gimpo,
Korea) was placed under fluoroscopic and endoscopic guidance ([Fig. 2], [Video 1]). This was followed, without scope exchange, by EUS-HGS: a long partially covered
metal stent (modified GIOBOR, Taewoong Medical) was successfully placed [1] from the B3 intrahepatic duct to the stomach under EUS, endoscopic, and fluoroscopic
guidance ([Fig. 3], [Video 2]). The total procedure time was 38 minutes.
Fig. 1 The new forward-oblique view convex-array echoendoscope, with 40° forward viewing
direction.
Fig. 2 Duodenal stent placement, using the new forward-oblique view echoendoscope, in a
patient with advanced pancreatic cancer and a combination of malignant biliary obstruction
and gastric outlet obstruction.
Video 1 Part 1. Simultaneous duodenal stenting and endoscopic ultrasound-guided hepaticogastrostomy
(EUS-HGS) using a forward-oblique view echoendoscope. A partially covered metal duodenal
stent is placed under fluoroscopic and endoscopic guidance.
Fig. 3 Endoscopic ultrasound-guided hepaticogastrostomy (EUS-HGS) performed, without scope
exchange, immediately after the duodenal stent placement shown in [Fig. 2]. The tip of the echoendoscope and the puncture site were seen endoscopically, enabling
stent insertion and deployment under direct visualization.
Video 2 Part 2. Simultaneous duodenal stenting and endoscopic ultrasound-guided hepaticogastrostomy
(EUS-HGS). In the subsequent (EUS-HGS), done without scope exchange, a long partially
covered metal stent is deployed from the B3 intrahepatic duct to the stomach under
EUS, endoscopic, and fluoroscopic guidance.
Combined malignant biliary obstruction and gastric outlet obstruction are not rare
in advanced pancreatic cancer and EUS-guided biliary drainage, especially EUS-HGS
[2], is increasingly reported because of its better patency than transpapillary biliary
drainage [3]. Conventionally, enteric stents are placed using a forward-viewing endoscope and
EUS-guided biliary drainage by an oblique-viewing echoendoscope. A single-session
dual-stent placement using two endoscopes has been described [4].
This new echoendoscope with a forward-oblique view has a 3.8-mm operating channel,
and has a 40° forward viewing direction with 140° field of view compared to the 55°
viewing direction and 100° field of view in the conventional oblique-viewing echoendoscope
[5]. This enables the direct visualization of both the enteric stricture and the enteric
stent deployment, and also helps hepaticogastrostomy with EUS-guided biliary drainage
stent deployment with endoscopic guidance. Thus a single echoendoscope can be used
to place a duodenal stent and an EUS-guided biliary drainage stent.
In conclusion, the simultaneous placement of a duodenal stent and EUS-HGS is feasible
using the new forward-oblique view echoendoscope, facilitating shorter procedure time
without the need for scope exchange.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_TTT_1AS_2AD
Endoscopy E-Videos is a free access online section, reporting on interesting cases and new techniques
in gastroenterological endoscopy. All papers include a high quality video and all
contributions are freely accessible online.
This section has its own submission website at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/e-videos