| Literature DB >> 26933627 |
Abdullah Emre Yıldırım1, Reskan Altun1, Serkan Ocal1, Murat Kormaz1, Figen Ozcay2, Haldun Selcuk1.
Abstract
Experience with endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in the pediatric population is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of ERCP in the pediatric population performed by adult gastroenterologists with standard duodenoscopes. This study is a structured retrospective review of endoscopic reports, computerized and paper medical records, and radiographic images of patients under the age of 18 who underwent ERCP for any indication at a tertiary referral centre. Data regarding demographic characteristics and medical history of patients, indications, technical success rate, final clinical diagnosis, and complications were analyzed. Forty-eight children with a mean age of 13 years (range 2-17) underwent a total of 65 ERCPs. The indications of ERCP were as follows; suspected choledocholithiasis (55 %), post-liver transplantation anastomotic biliary strictures (21 %), post-surgical bile duct injury (10 %), choledochal cyst (2 %), recurrent or chronic pancreatitis (10 %), and trauma (2 %). The cannulation success rate in the overall procedure was 93.8 %. Therapeutic interventions were performed in 70.7 % of patients. Post ERCP pancreatitis was the most common complication occurring in 9.2 % of patients, and no procedure related mortality occurred. When performed by well-trained adult gastroenterologists, the use of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with standard duodenoscopes is safe in pediatric population.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood; Duodenoscope; Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; Pediatric ERCP
Year: 2016 PMID: 26933627 PMCID: PMC4760957 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-1749-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Patients’ demographics
| Gender (%) | |
| Female | 20 (42 %) |
| Male | 28 (58 %) |
| Median age (max–min) | 13 (2–17) |
| ERCP procedures (%) | |
| Diagnostic | 33 (51 %) |
| Therapeutic | 32 (49 %) |
Final diagnosis after ERCP
| n (%) | |
|---|---|
| Choledocholithiasis | 12 (25 %) |
| Post-liver transplantation biliary strictures | 11 (22.9 %) |
| Normal | 11 (22.9 %) |
| Post-surgical bile duct injury | 3 (6.2 %) |
| Biliary strictures | 2 (4.1 %) |
| Pancreas divisium | 2 (4.1 %) |
| Choledochal cyst | 1 (2.1 %) |
| Chronic pancreatitis | 1 (2.1 %) |
| Pancreatic duct injury | 1 (2.1 %) |
| Unsuccessful ERCP | 4 (8.4 %) |
ERCPs success, cannulation properties and techniques rates
| N | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Overall ERCP procedures, papilla cannulation success | 61 | 93.8 (61/65) |
| Cannulation success rate per patients | 44 | 91.7 (44/48) |
| Successful cannulation in first ERCP procedure | 41 | 93.2 (41/44) |
| Successful cannulation in second ERCP procedure | 3 | 6.8 (3/44) |
| Successful cannulation with standard cannulation techniques | 39 | 88.6 (39/44) |
| Successful cannulation with precut sphincterotomy techniques | 5 | 11.4 (5/44) |
Therapeutic interventions (65 procedures in 48 patients)
| n (%) | |
|---|---|
| Sphincterotomy | 38 (58.5 %) |
| Balloon sweep | 17 (26.1 %) |
| Biliary plastic stent insertion | 12 (18.5 %) |
| Stone extraction | 8 (12.3 %) |
| Nasobiliary drainage tube placement | 6 (9.2 %) |
| Ballon dilatation of biliary strictures | 1 (1.5 %) |
Complications related to ERCP
| N | % of total ERCP | |
|---|---|---|
| Post ERCP pancreatits | 6 | 9.2 |
| Bleeding after sphincterotomy | 2 | 3.1 |
| Total | 8 | 12.3 |
Pediatric endoscopic retrograd cholangiopancreatography larger series
| References | Mean age (range) | Study design | Endoscopist | Patient (n) | ERCP (n) | Procedure success (%) | Therapeutic (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giefer and Kozarek ( | 13.6 years (2 months–18 years) | Retrospective | Adult | 276 | 425 | 95 | 81 |
| Troendle et al. ( | 12.7 years (1 months–19 years) | Retrospective | Pediatric and adult | 313 | 432 | NR | 86 |
| Enestvedt et al. ( | 14.9 years (3 months–21 years) | Retrospective | Adult | 296 | 429 | 95 | 64 |
| Halvorson et al. ( | 12 years (6 years–17 years) | Retrospective | Adult | 45 | 70 | 99 | 93 |
| Troendle and Barth ( | 15.2 years (1 months–18.4 years) | Retrospective | Pediatric | 65 | 154 | 100 | 100 |
| Otto et al. ( | 11.4 years (2 months–21 years) | Retrospective | Adult | 167 | 231 | NR | 69 |
| Jang et al. ( | 8 years (1 months–16 years) | Retrospective | Pediatric | 122 | 245 | 98 | 78 |
| Iqbal et al. ( | NR | Retrospective | Adult | 224 | 343 | NR | 43 |
| Cheng et al. ( | 9.3 years (1 months–17 years) | Retrospective | Adult | 245 | 329 | 98 | 71 |
NR not specifically reported