Andrew S Ross1, Charles Dye, Vivek N Prachand. 1. Current affiliations: Section of Endoscopy and Therapeutics and Section of General Surgery, The University of Chicago Hospitals, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surveillance and treatment of small-bowel polyps in patients with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome (PJS) can be challenging and may require intraoperative enteroscopy. While initial reports that used double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE) for the resection of small-bowel polyps in patients with PJS appear promising, complete enteroscopy when using this technique may require multiple procedures or may not be possible at all. OBJECTIVE: To develop a single-procedure approach to the surveillance and the treatment of small-bowel polyps in patients with PJS. DESIGN: Retrospective review. SETTING: Single, North American tertiary-care center. PATIENTS: Individuals with PJS and small-bowel polyps identified by other modalities. INTERVENTIONS: DBE was combined with laparoscopy as a single-procedure surveillance and therapeutic strategy for small-bowel PJS polyps. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Completion of enteroscopy, number of polyps resected, procedure duration, complications. RESULTS: Three patients with a history of PJS and known small-bowel polyps underwent laparoscopic-assisted DBE (LADBE). Complete enteroscopy was performed, and all polyps larger than 0.5 cm were resected endoscopically. No cases of cancer or dysplasia were noted; procedure times lasted from 1 to 4 hours. Postoperative complications included ileus in 2 patients. LIMITATIONS: Small sample size, single-center experience. CONCLUSIONS: LADBE holds promise as a new technique that can be used as both a surveillance and a therapeutic tool for small-bowel polyps in patients with PJS.
BACKGROUND: Surveillance and treatment of small-bowel polyps in patients with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome (PJS) can be challenging and may require intraoperative enteroscopy. While initial reports that used double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE) for the resection of small-bowel polyps in patients with PJS appear promising, complete enteroscopy when using this technique may require multiple procedures or may not be possible at all. OBJECTIVE: To develop a single-procedure approach to the surveillance and the treatment of small-bowel polyps in patients with PJS. DESIGN: Retrospective review. SETTING: Single, North American tertiary-care center. PATIENTS: Individuals with PJS and small-bowel polyps identified by other modalities. INTERVENTIONS: DBE was combined with laparoscopy as a single-procedure surveillance and therapeutic strategy for small-bowel PJS polyps. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Completion of enteroscopy, number of polyps resected, procedure duration, complications. RESULTS: Three patients with a history of PJS and known small-bowel polyps underwent laparoscopic-assisted DBE (LADBE). Complete enteroscopy was performed, and all polyps larger than 0.5 cm were resected endoscopically. No cases of cancer or dysplasia were noted; procedure times lasted from 1 to 4 hours. Postoperative complications included ileus in 2 patients. LIMITATIONS: Small sample size, single-center experience. CONCLUSIONS: LADBE holds promise as a new technique that can be used as both a surveillance and a therapeutic tool for small-bowel polyps in patients with PJS.
Authors: Rachele Borgogni; Federica Gaiani; Francesco Di Mario; Fabiola Fornaroli; Gioacchino Leandro; Barbara Bizzarri; Alessia Ghiselli; Gian Luigi De' Angelis; Emilio Casolari Journal: Acta Biomed Date: 2018-12-17