Transenteric ERCP via EUS-guided anastomosis using lumen-apposing metal stents in patients with surgically altered anatomy (with video) - 01/12/25
, Michiel Bronswijk, MD 3, 4, Amy Tyberg, MD 5, Giuseppe Vanella, MD, PhD 6, Andrea Anderloni, MD 7, 8, Pieter Hindryckx, MD, PhD 9, Haroon Shahid, MD 5, Paolo Giorgio Arcidiacono, MD 6, 10, Jean-Philippe Ratone, MD 11, Avik Sarkar, MD 5, Cecilia Binda, MD 12, Iman Andalib, MD 5, Wim Laleman, MD, PhD 3, 13, Jan-Werner Poley, MD 14, Mariano Gonzalez Haba, MD 15, Fabrice Caillol, MD 11, Carlo Fabbri, MD 12, Tom Boeken, MD 2, 16, Aymeric Becq, MD, PhD 17, Laurent Monino, MD 18, Christophe Cellier, MD, PhD 1, 2, Michel Kahaleh, MD 19, Schalk van der Merwe, MD, PhD 3Abstract |
Background and Aims |
Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS)-directed transenteric endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP, EUS-directed transenteric ERCP [EDEE]) using a lumen-apposing metal stent (LAMS) is a novel biliary drainage technique for patients with surgically altered anatomy. The study aimed to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and effectiveness of EDEE.
Methods |
This is a multicenter, retrospective study. We included consecutive patients with altered anatomy who underwent an EDEE. Surgical anatomy configuration, prior biliary drainage, and ERCP indications were collected. The EUS-guided anastomosis technique was assessed. The primary outcome was the technical success of the EDEE. The secondary outcomes were the clinical success and the adverse events (AEs).
Results |
Ninety-four ERCPs were performed in 55 patients (60 ± 16.2 years old, 56.4% male). The most frequent surgical anatomy was Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy ( n = 23, 41.8%) and a prior biliary drainage was performed in 28 patients (50.9%). Benign strictures were the most frequent indication (58.2%). The most frequent techniques to identify the biliary limb were EUS imaging alone ( n = 14, 25.5%) and EUS-guided puncture of the biliary limb with retrograde opacification of the surgical hepaticojejunostomy ( n = 14, 25.5%). The procedure was performed using a direct freehand approach ( n = 49, 89.1%). Technical and clinical success rates of EDEE were 87.3% and 93.8%, respectively. The overall AE rate was 20% (9.1% LAMS-related). The rate of persistent fistula was 30.6% with a median follow-up period of 3 months.
Conclusions |
The EDEE technique offers a new and effective approach for biliary drainage in patients with surgically altered anatomy, particularly in benign indications and/or when several ERCPs are expected.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : AE, EDEE, EDGE, ERCP, EUS, HJ, LAMS, RYGB, SAA
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