Clinical Utility of Treatment Method Conversion During Single-session Endoscopic Ultrasound-guided Biliary Drainage
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Although several techniques for endoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary drainage (EUS-BD) are available at present, an optimal treatment algorithm of EUS-BD has not yet been established.
Aim: To evaluate the clinical utility of treatment method conversion during single endoscopic sessions for difficult cases in initially planned EUS-BD.
Methods: This was a single-center retrospective analysis using a prospectively accumulated database. Patients with biliary obstruction undergoing EUS-BD between May 2008 and April 2016 were included. The primary outcome was to evaluate the improvement in EUS-BD success rates by converting the treatment methods during a single endoscopic session. Secondary outcomes were clarification of the factors leading to the conversion from the initial EUS-BD and the assessment of efficacy and safety of the conversion as judged by technical success, clinical success, and adverse events (AEs).
Results: A total of 208 patients underwent EUS-BD during the study period. For 18.8% (39/208) of the patients, the treatment methods were converted to another EUS-BD technique from the initial plan. Biliary obstruction was caused by pancreatobiliary malignancies, other malignant lesions, biliary stones, and other benign lesions in 22, 11, 4, and 2 patients, respectively. The reasons for the difficulty with the initial EUS-BD were classified into the following 3 procedures: Target puncture ( = 13), guidewire manipulation ( = 18), and puncture tract dilation ( = 8). Technical success was achieved in 97.4% (38/39) of the cases and clinical success was achieved in 89.5% of patients (34/38). AEs occurred in 10.3% of patients, including bile leakage ( = 2), bleeding ( = 1), and cholecystitis ( = 1). The puncture target and drainage technique were altered in subsequent EUS-BD procedures in 25 and 14 patients, respectively. The final technical success rate with 95%CI for all 208 cases was 97.1% (95%CI: 93.8%-98.9%), while that of the initially planned EUS-BD was 78.8% (95%CI: 72.6%-84.2%).
Conclusion: Among multi-step procedures in EUS-BD, guidewire manipulation appeared to be the most technically challenging. When initially planned EUS-BD is technically difficult, treatment method conversion in a single endoscopic session may result in successful EUS-BD without leading to severe AEs.
Strict Surgical Repair for Bile Leakage Following the Roux-en-Y Hepaticojejunostomy.
Zhang K, Wu L, Gao K, Yan C, Zheng C, Guo C Front Surg. 2021; 8:641127.
PMID: 34017852 PMC: 8130580. DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2021.641127.
Minaga K, Takenaka M, Ogura T, Tamura T, Kuroda T, Kaku T Therap Adv Gastroenterol. 2020; 13:1756284820930964.
PMID: 32774461 PMC: 7391429. DOI: 10.1177/1756284820930964.