EUS-guided gallbladder drainage in patients with acute cholecystitis and high surgical risk using an electrocautery-enhanced lumen-apposing metal stent device - 14/09/17
Abstract |
Background and Aims |
In high-risk surgical patients, the treatment of choice of acute cholecystitis is percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage (PTGBD). Recently, a novel endoscopic device containing a lumen-apposing metal stent with an electrocautery (ECE-LAMS) on the tip has been developed.
Methods |
High-risk surgical patients with acute cholecystitis who underwent EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) with the novel device were retrospectively retrieved from 7 tertiary care referral centers. Main endpoints were technical and clinical success rates, rate of procedural adverse events, and short- and long-term adverse events.
Results |
Seventy-five patients (mean age, 75 ± 11 years; 36 men) underwent EUS-GBD. The procedure was technically and clinically successful in 98.7% and 95.9% of cases, respectively. Three patients without resolution of cholecystitis died, and 2 patients had procedure-related adverse events: 1 perforation requiring surgery and 1 major bleeding resolved conservatively. The mean follow-up for the entire cohort was 201 ± 226 days. Seven patients (9.6%) died within the first 30 days; 50 patients (71.4%) were alive at the last date of follow-up. Short- and long-term adverse events occurred in 6 patients: 3 had recurrent cholecystitis, 2 had migration of the stent, and 1 developed Bouveret syndrome, all managed nonsurgically. Overall, 8 adverse events (10.7%) occurred in the entire cohort of patients.
Conclusions |
The novel ECE-LAMS for high-risk surgical patients with acute cholecystitis is safe, with a high technical and clinical success rate. Future multicenter studies comparing EUS-GBD versus PTGBD are warranted to determine which procedure is safer and clinically more effective for patients with high surgical risk acute cholecystitis.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Graphical Abstract |
Abbreviations : ECE-LAMS, EUS-GBD, GBD, LAMS, PTGBD
Plan
| DISCLOSURE: The following authors disclosed financial relationships relevant to this publication: M. Dollhopf, A. Larghi, A. Yuen Bun Teoh, R. Kunda: Consultant for Boston Scientific. All other authors disclosed no financial relationships relevant to this publication. |
Vol 86 - N° 4
P. 636-643 - octobre 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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