| Literature DB >> 23370813 |
Takeshi Fujita1, Masahiro Tanabe, Kensaku Shimizu, Etsushi Iida, Naofumi Matsunaga.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical effectiveness of covered Niti-S stent placement under multidetector CT and fluoroscopy guidance for the palliation of dysphagia in patients with cervical esophageal cancer. Under radiological imaging guidance using axial and sagittal CT scans, and fluoroscopy, Niti-S esophageal stents were placed in ten consecutive patients with complete obstruction caused by cervical esophageal cancer (9 men and 1 woman; age range = 54-79 years; mean age = 68.1 years) between February 2010 and December 2011. The procedure time and technical success rate were evaluated. Swallowing improvement was assessed by the following items: ability to eat and/or swallow (graded as follows: 3 = ability to eat normal diet, 2 = ability to eat semisolids, 1 = ability to swallow liquids, 0 = complete obstruction). Procedural and post-procedural complications were also evaluated. Survival (mean ± SD) was examined. The mean (±SD) procedure time was 40 ± 19 min (range = 21-69 min). Stent placement was technically successful in all patients; inadequate stent deployment did not occur in any case. Ability to eat and/or swallow was improved and scored 2.4 (score 3 in 5 cases, score 2 in 4 cases, score 1 in 1 case, and score 0 in no case) after stent placement. No major or post-procedural complications were encountered. The mean survival time was 131 ± 77 days (range = 31-259 days). Niti-S stents appeared to be a safe and effective device for the palliation of dysphagia caused by advanced cervical esophageal cancer. Multidetector CT and fluoroscopy image guidance helped the operators accurately place the stents in the cervical esophagus.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23370813 PMCID: PMC3669509 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-013-9446-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Fig. 1Niti-S-covered esophageal stent
Fig. 2Contrast-enhanced axial CT image a week before the stent placement shows the esophageal cancer (arrow) in the cervical region in a 64 year-old man
Fig. 3Sagittal CT image obtained with an IVR-CT system immediately before the stent placement demonstrates that cervical esophageal cancer (arrows) does not directly invade the hypopharynx
Fig. 4Upper esophageal orifice (arrows) is clearly revealed on unenhanced axial CT image
Fig. 5Covered Niti-S esophageal stent is deployed (arrow). The radiopaque marker is placed on the body surface as the seventh cervical vertebra (arrowhead)
Fig. 6Endoscopic view of expanding Niti-S stent the day after insertion
Fig. 7Contrast study shows satisfactory positioning and expansion of the stent 2 days after deployment