| Literature DB >> 21487883 |
K Tim Buddingh1, Vincent B Nieuwenhuijs, Lianne van Buuren, Jan B F Hulscher, Johannes S de Jong, Gooitzen M van Dam.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bile duct injury (BDI) is a dreaded complication of cholecystectomy, often caused by misinterpretation of biliary anatomy. To prevent BDI, techniques have been developed for intraoperative assessment of bile duct anatomy. This article reviews the evidence for the different techniques and discusses their strengths and weaknesses in terms of efficacy, ease, and cost-effectiveness.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21487883 PMCID: PMC3142332 DOI: 10.1007/s00464-011-1639-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Endosc ISSN: 0930-2794 Impact factor: 4.584
Evidence on the different modalities for intraoperative assessment of the biliary tree
| Primary author | No. of patients | Study description | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| CVS—patient series of LCs using the CVS | |||
| Rawlings [ | 54 | All patients (suffering from biliary colic) underwent single-port LC using the CVS technique. | CVS in all patients; |
| 0 BDI, 0 bile leaks | |||
| Sanjay [ | 447 | All patients (acute pathology) underwent LC using the CVS technique. | CVS achieved in 388 (87%); |
| 0 BDI, 0 bile leaks | |||
| Avgerinos [ | 1,046 | All patients underwent LC using the CVS technique. | CVS achieved in 998 (95%); |
| 0 BDI, 5 bile leaks (0.5%) | |||
| Yegiyants [ | 3,046 | Administrative data of an institution in which CVS was standard. Injuries requiring surgical repair were identified. | CVS percentage not assessed; |
| 1 BDI (0.03%), bile leaks not assessed | |||
| IOC—studies > 10,000 patients on the association between IOC and BDI | |||
| Z’graggen [ | 10,174 | 1992–1995; analysis of LCs in a prospective database for which numerous Swiss institutions provide data (SALTS). | OR for BDI using IOC = 0.97 (95% CI 0.44–2.18), unadjusted for confounders |
| Flum [ | 30,630 | 1991–1998; Washington State Hospital Discharge Database searched for CBD repair codes <90 days after LC. | OR for BDI using IOC = 0.63 (95% CI 0.40–0.90), adjusted for confounders |
| Hobbs [ | 33,309 | 1988–1998; Western Australia Data Linkage System was searched in different ways for patients with complications. Medical files of these patients were assessed in detail. | OR for BDI using IOC = 0.68 (95% CI 0.42–1.03), adjusted for confounders |
| Flum [ | 1,570,361 | 1992–1999; US Medicare data was searched for codes for CBD repair within 1 year after cholecystectomy. | OR for BDI using IOC = 0.58 (95% CI 0.44–0.72), adjusted for confounders |
| Waage [ | 152,776 | 1987–2001; Swedish Inpatient Registry searched for codes for CBD repair within 1 year after cholecystectomy. | OR for BDI using IOC = 0.75 (95% CI 0.59–0.92), adjusted for confounders |
| Giger [ | 31,838 | 1995–2005; analysis of LCs in a prospective database for which numerous Swiss institutions provide data (SALTS). | OR for BDI using IOC = 1.14 (95% CI 0.76–1.70), unadjusted for confounders |
| LUS—patient studies on LUS during LC | |||
| Machi [ | 2,159 | Review of 12 studies (from before 1999) comparing LUS to IOC during LC. | Success of LUS and IOC 88-100%; BDI not assessed |
| Catheline [ | 600 | All patients underwent LCs with LUS, 498 also underwent IOC. | LUS and IOC equal success; LUS faster (10 vs. 18 min, |
| Kimura [ | 183 | All patients underwent LCs with LUS and IOC. | LUS success 95%; IOC success 96%; 0 BDI; 1 bile leak after choledochotomy |
| Tranter [ | 367 | All patients underwent LC with LUS. | LUS success 99%; BDI not reported |
| Biffl [ | 844 | Nonrandomized comparison between LC with LUS ( | Without LUS: 11 BDI (1.9%); routine LUS: 0 BDI ( |
| Catheline [ | 900 | All patients underwent LCs with LUS and IOC. | LUS success 100%; IOC success 85%; BDI not reported |
| Tranter [ | 135 | All patients underwent LCs with LUS and IOC. | LUS success 97%, IOC success 90%; BDI not reported |
| Onders [ | 256 | Description of one surgeon’s experience with LUS. | Increase in use of LUS from 29% in 2001 to 77% in 2004; 0 BDI |
| Machi [ | 200 | All patients underwent LC with LUS. | LUS success in 97%; 0 BDI, 0 bile leaks |
| Perry [ | 236 | All patients underwent LC with LUS. | LUS success in 95%; 0 BDI; 0 bile leaks |
| Hakamada [ | 644 | Comparison of outcome before ( | Without LUS: 4 BDI (1.1%); routine LUS: 0 BDI ( |
| Machi [ | 1,381 | Prospective multicenter series of LC with LUS. | LUS success 98%; 0 BDI; 3 leaks (0.2%) |
| CCC—patient studies on CCC during LC | |||
| Wills [ | 76 | Randomized controlled trial between IOC ( | IOC success in 100%, CCC in 72% ( |
| Daoud [ | 325 | Nonrandomized comparison between IOC ( | IOC success 83%, CCC success 86% |
| Glattli [ | 69 | Nonrandomized comparison between IOC ( | IOC success 92%, CCC success 48%; CCC images of inferior quality |
| Fox [ | 113 | All patients underwent LC with CCC. | CCC was successful in 81% |
| Koksal [ | 40 | All patients underwent LC with CCC. | CCC was successful in 90% |
| Moont [ | 97 | All patients underwent LC with CCC. | CCC was successful in 85% |
| Young [ | 194 | All patients underwent LC with CCC. | CCC was successful in 81% |
| Holzman [ | 60 | Patients underwent “partial CCC” with the Kumar clamp. | Kumar CCC was successful in 83% |
| Kumar [ | 50 | Patients underwent “partial CCC” with the Kumar clamp. | Kumar CCC was successful in 98% |
| Dye cholangiography—patient series on dye cholangiography during LC | |||
| Pertsemlidis [ | 18 | Indocyanine green (ICG) was intravenously administered to patients undergoing LC. | Cystic duct and CBD colored green in all patients. No images provided |
| Sari [ | 46 | Blue dye was injected into the gallbladder during LC. | Cystic duct and CBD colored blue in 43/46 patients |
| Xu [ | 20 | Blue dye was injected into the gallbladder during LC. | Extrahepatic bile ducts colored blue in 18/20 patients. No images provided |
| Light cholangiography—patient series | |||
| Xu [ | 16 | Optical fiber led into the CBD with a duodenoscope during LC. CBD cannulation successful in 13/16 patients. | CBD visualized in 13 cases, cystic duct only in 4 cases. No images provided |
| Passive infrared cholangiography—animal study | |||
| Liu [ | 6 pigs | Room temperature saline was infused into the biliary tract. Images were taken with an infrared camera. | Infrared images correlated well with IOC. Artificial stones and BDI detected |
| Near-infrared cholangiography (NIRF-C)—patient studies on NIRF-C | |||
| Mitsuhashi [ | 5 | Open cholecystectomy after intravenous infusion of ICG. A NIRF camera system was used to capture images. | Fluorescence observed in the liver, gallbladder, and bile ducts of all patients |
| Ishizawa [ | 1 | First laparoscopic experience with NIRF-C during cholecystectomy. | Fluorescence observed in cystic duct and CBD |
| Ishizawa [ | 10 | Open cholecystectomy after intravenous infusion of ICG. A NIRF camera system was used to capture images. | Cystic duct and CBD were identified in 9/10 patients using NIRF-C |
| Aoki [ | 14 | LC after intravenous administration of ICG. | CBD-cystic duct junction identified in 10/14 patients |
| Tagaya [ | 12 | LC after intravenous ICG. Hepatoduodenal ligament was compressed with plastic device for improved exposure. | The CBD-cystic duct junction was identified in all patients |
| Ishizawa [ | 52 | LC after intravenous ICG. | CBD-cystic duct junction identified in 50/52 patients |
| Hyperspectral cholangiography—animal studies | |||
| Zuzak [ | 1 pig | A laparoscopic near-infrared, hyperspectral imaging system was used to assess bile duct anatomy in a pig. | Bile ducts, arteries, and veins all have unique reflectance spectra |
| Livingston [ | 8 pigs | Characteristics of different types of tissue were assessed using a laparoscopic hyperspectral imaging system. | Bile ducts, arteries, and veins all have unique reflectance spectra |
LC laparoscopic cholecystectomy, CVS critical view of safety, BDI bile duct injury, IOC intraoperative cholangiography, LUS laparoscopic ultrasound, CCC cholecystocholangiography, NIRF-C near-infrared fluorescence cholangiography, CBD common bile duct, ICG indocyanine green, OR odds ratio
aIncludes data set of Fletcher et al. [84]
bIncludes data set of Krahenbuhl et al. [85]
Fig. 1Forest plot of protective effect of IOC on BDI during cholecystectomy [30–35]. OR odds ratio, BDI bile duct injury, IOC intraoperative cholangiography. *Unadjusted OR; **The data set of Fletcher et al. [84] is included in the study by Hobbs et al. [30]. ***The data set of Krahenbuhl et al. [85] is included in the study by Giger et al. [35]. Studies were weighted by the square root of the study size. Results are plotted on a natural logarithmic scale
Fig. 2Passive infrared cholangiography in a porcine model depicting leakage of room temperature saline from the common bile duct (CBD) [70] (with permission from Springer Science + Business Media, © 2008)
Fig. 3Near infrared fluorescen cholangiography during laparoscopic cholecystectomy [78]. A Cystic duct running parallel to common hepatic duct, B isolation of cystic duct from anterior side of Calot’s triangle, C isolation of cystic duct from posterior side of Calot’s triangle, D closure of cystic duct (with kind permission from John Wiley and Sons Ltd © 2010, all rights reserved)
Fig. 4Hyperspectral cholangiography. A Near-infrared (NIR) laparoscopic hyperspectral image of the hepatoduodenal ligament in live anesthetized pigs. B An artery indicated by spectra with broad oxyhemoglobin peak and a small water peak at 970 nm. C A vein is identified by spectra containing a deoxyhemoglobin shoulder, a broad oxyhemoglobin peak, and a small water peak. D The common bile duct is associated with spectra containing a lipid shoulder and a prominent water peak [82] (with permission from Elsevier Inc., © 2008)
Summary of techniques and modalities for intraoperative visualization of bile ducts
| Modality | Application | Evidence | Safety | Ease | Success rate | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Critical view of safety (CVS) | – | Worldwide consensus that CVS technique is the gold standard for performing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, but limited evidence. | – | – | 90–95% | – |
| Intraoperative cholangiography (IOC) | After dissection in Calot’s triangle | Several very large retrospective data sets report association of IOC with lower rates of BDI. | Safe (minimally invasive) | At times cumbersome | 90–95% | 15 min |
| Laparoscopic ultrasound (LUS) | Repetitively | One retrospective study reported lower rates of BDI with LUS compared to no imaging modality. Many prospective studies report higher success rates of LUS than of IOC. | Very safe (noninvasive) | Requires considerable experience | >95% | 5–10 min |
| Cholecystocholangiography (CCC) | Before dissection in Calot’s triangle | One randomized controlled trial and several retrospective studies all show inferiority of images compared to IOC. | Reasonably safe (possible added risk of gallbladder rupture) | Easy | ~80% | 5–10 min |
| Dye cholangiography | Real time | Several series describe visualizing the biliary tract but convincing images and quantitative data are lacking. | Reasonably safe (risk of dye extravasation) | Easy | ~90% | 5–10 min |
| Light cholangiography | Real time | One series in patients is reported but no images are provided. | Potentially hazardous (retrograde maneuvering of an optical fiber into CBD) | Requires endoscopy skills | Unknown | Unknown |
| Passive infrared cholangiography | Real time | One study in pigs yielding excellent images. | Safe (minimally invasive) | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown |
| Near-infrared fluorescence cholangiography (NIRF-C) | Real time | Several animal studies yielding high-quality images of the biliary tract and BDI. A few small studies in patients yielding images of limited quality. One study of 52 patients with fair results. | Safe (noninvasive when intravenous agents are used) | Easy | Unknown | Unknown |
| Hyperspectral cholangiography | Real time | Two studies in pigs report positive differentiation between gallbladder tissue and blood vessel tissue. | Very safe (noninvasive) | Easy | Unknown | Unknown |
BDI bile duct injury, CBD common bile duct