| Literature DB >> 29852730 |
Deepanshu Jain1, Bharat Singh Bhandari2, Nikhil Agrawal3, Shashideep Singhal4.
Abstract
Surgery remains the standard treatment for acute cholecystitis except in high-risk candidates where percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage (PT-GBD), endoscopic transpapillary cystic duct stenting (ET-CDS), and endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) are potential choices. PT-GBD is contraindicated in patients with coagulopathy or ascites and is not preferred by patients owing to aesthetic reasons. ET-CDS is successful only if the cystic duct can be visualized and cannulated. For 189 patients who underwent EUS-GBD via insertion of a lumen-apposing metal stent (LAMS), the composite technical success rate was 95.2%, which increased to 96.8% when LAMS was combined with co-axial self-expandable metal stent (SEMS). The composite clinical success rate was 96.7%. We observed a small risk of recurrent cholecystitis (5.1%), gastrointestinal bleeding (2.6%) and stent migration (1.1%). Cautery enhanced LAMS significantly decreases the stent deployment time compared to non-cautery enhanced LAMS. Prophylactic placement of a pigtail stent or SEMS through the LAMS avoids re-interventions, particularly in patients, where it is intended to remain in situ indefinitely. Limited evidence suggests that the efficacy of EUS-GBD via LAMS is comparable to that of PT-GBD with the former showing better results in postoperative pain, length of hospitalization, and need for antibiotics. EUS-GBD via LAMS is a safe and efficacious option when performed by experts.Entities:
Keywords: Acute cholecystitis; Endoscopic ultrasound; Lumen-apposing metal stent
Year: 2018 PMID: 29852730 PMCID: PMC6182281 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2018.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Descriptive Summary of Each Individual Study
| Study Location | Type of study | Number of Patients | Indication/Disease | Age (yr) and sex | Technical outcome | Clinical outcome | Follow up duration | Stent left/re-trieved | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de la Serna-Higuera et al. (2013) [ | Retrospective Case series | 13 | Indication- | 1. Mean age-79.9 (range, 57-97) | 1. Success-11/13 (84.6%) | Success- 11/11 (100%) | 1. Mean-100.81 days (range, 24-210) | 1. Stent left | Composite procedure related AE- 2 |
| 1. Acute cholecystitis (non-surgical candidate) | 2. Gender distribution- | 2. Failure of insertion- 2/13 | Parameter- | 2. Stent retrieved-1/11(no replacement stent placed due to symptom resolution and collapse of GB wall) | 1. Scant hematochezia without anemia- 1/2 (resolved with conservative Mx) | ||||
| Etiology- | a) F- 5 | a) 1/2- Tight cobblestone GB | 1. Immediate symptom relief | 2. Mild right upper quadrant pain-1/2 (resolved with conservative Mx) | |||||
| 1. Cholelithiasis-9/13 | b) M- 8 | b) 1/2- Uncontrolled stent release- complete deployment into the gastric lunien- | 2. Normalization of LFTs and acute phase reactants | ||||||
| 2. Cholelithiasis+ Pancreatic cancer-2/13 | |||||||||
| 3. Cholelithiasis+ C holangiocarc inoma-1/13 | |||||||||
| 4. Cholangiocarcinoma-1/13 | |||||||||
| Itoi et al. (2013) [ | Case Report | 1 | Indication- | 1. Age-57 | Success-1/1 (100%) | Success-1/1 (100%) | 1 yr | 1. Stent left | None |
| 1. Acute cholangitis (ERCP technically challenging) | 2. Gender distribution- | Parameter- | |||||||
| Etiology- | a) F- 0 | 1. Clinical symptoms | |||||||
| 1. Pancreatic head mass with concomitant duodenal and biliary obstruction | b) M- 1 | ||||||||
| Itoi et al. (2014) [ | Case report | 1 | Indication- | 1. Age- 96 | Success- 1/1 (100%) | Success-1/1 (100%) | N/A | 1. Stent retrieved-1/1 (2 weeks post placement along with 20x30 mm gallstone removal with help of lithotripter) | None |
| 1. Acute cholecystitis (Non-surgical candidate) | 2. Gender distribution- | ||||||||
| a) F- 1 | |||||||||
| b) M- 0 | |||||||||
| Tharian etal. (2016) [ | Case report | 1 | Indication- | 1. Age-81 | Success-1/1 (100%) | Success-1/1 (100%) | 1 mo | 1. Stent | None |
| 1. Distended GB | 2. Gender distribution- | Parameter- | |||||||
| Disease- | a) F- 0 | 1. Clinical symptoms | |||||||
| 1. Adenocarcinoma of GB neck | b) M- 1 | ||||||||
| Irani et al. (2015) [ | Multicenter Retrospective | 15 | Indication- | 1. Median age- 74 (range, 42-89) | 1. Success-14/15 (93%) | Success-15/15 (100%) | Mean-160 (range, 39- 260) days | 1. Stent | Composite procedure related AE- 1 |
| 1. Acute calculous cholecystitis- 7/15 | 2. Gender distribution- | 2. Success with assistance- 1/15 (salvaged by placing SEMS via LAMS) | |||||||
| 2. Non calculous cholecystitis- 4/15 | a) F-7 | Modality-Phone calls, Clinic visits, Imaging studies | 1. Post-procedure fever-1/15 (successfully treated with antibiotics) | ||||||
| 3. Biliary obst ruction-2/15 | b) M- 8 | ||||||||
| 4. Gallbladder hydrops- 1/15 | |||||||||
| 5. Symptomatic cholelithiasis-1/15 (All were non-surgical candidates and all refused percutaneous drainage) | |||||||||
| Kumta et al. (2016) [ | Case report | 1 | Indication- chronic calculous cholecystitis (not a surgical candidate and refused percutaneous drainage) | 1. Age- 77 years | Success-1/1 (100%) | Success-1/1 (100%) | 6 mo | 1. Stent left | None |
| 2. Gender distribution- | Parameter- | ||||||||
| a) F- 1 | 1. Clinical symptoms | ||||||||
| Law et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective Single center Case series | 7 | Indication- acute calculous cholecystitis (prior percutaneous drain and poor surgical candidates) | 1. Median Age- 57 (range, 32-81) | Success-5/7 (71.4%) | Success-7/7 (100 %) | 4 mo (Interquartile range, 3.5-5.5) | 1. Stent left | None |
| 2.Gender distribution- | Success with assistance- 2/7 (salvaged with SEMS placement through LAMS) | Paranieter-1. Clinical symptoms | 2. Stent retrieved-3/7 | ||||||
| a) F- 1 | a) 2/3- replaced with double pigtail stent at 6 weeks and 4 mo | ||||||||
| b) M - 6 | b) 1/3- removed to allow stone extraction which spontaneously passed into ileostomy bag | ||||||||
| Dollhopf et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective Single center | 75 | Indication - acute calculous and acalculous cholecystitis (poor surgical candidates) | 1. Median age- 75±11 (range, 41–96) | 1. Success- 74/75 (98.7%) | Success- 71/74 (95.9%) | 1. Mean: 201±226 (range, 2–1,192) days | 1. Stent left | Composite procedure related AE- 10 |
| 2. Gender distribution- | 2. Failure- 1/75 (equipment malfunctioningleading to gastric perforation managed surgically) | Parameter- | 2. Stent retrieved- 5/75 | 1. Major bleeding- 1/10 (resolved with conservative management) | |||||
| a) F- 39 | 1. Clinical symptoms | 3. Stent migration- 1/75 (spontaneous, persistent cholecystogastric fistula with no clinical consequences) | 2. Recurrent cholecystitis-3/10 | ||||||
| b) M- 36 | Failure- 3/74 (death on post procedure day 3, 13 and 27 secondary to worsening sepsis) | a) 1/3- conservative management | |||||||
| b) 2/3- double pigtail stent placed via LAMS | |||||||||
| 3. Migration- 2/10 | |||||||||
| a) 1/2- proximal migration into GB at 8 m post procedure (endoscopic removal and replacement with another LAMS) | |||||||||
| b) 1/2- intragastric migration at day 5 post procedure (endoscopic stent retrieval and closure of fistula with clip) | |||||||||
| 4. Bouveret syndrome- 1/10- 4 m post procedure (endoscopy and lithotripsy of occluding stone | |||||||||
| 5. Sepsis- 3/10- leading to death | |||||||||
| Irani et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective Multicenter | EUS guided GB drainage (EUS-GBD)-45 | Indication - 1) Acute calculous and acalculous cholecystitis (poor surgical candidates) | 1. Median age- 55 (range, 25–87) | 1. Success- 44/45 (98%) | 1. Success- 43/45 (96%) | 215 (range, 1–621) days | 1. Stent left | Composite procedure related AE- 8 |
| 2. Gender distribution | 2. Success with assistance- 1/45 (salvaged with 10×60 mm fully covered biliary metal stent placed via LAMS) | 2. Median pain score on post procedure Day 1- 2.5 (range, 1–9) | 1. Bleeding- 2/8 | ||||||
| a) F- 16 | a) 1/2- 3 days post procedure (treated by clot evacuation and pigtail stent placement through LAMS) | ||||||||
| b) M- 29 | 3. Median hospital stay post intervention- 3 (range, 1–23) | b) 1/2- 6 mo post procedure (stopped spontaneously with reversal of coagulopathy) | |||||||
| 2. Recurrent cholecystitis- 3/8 (6, 8 and 12 mo post procedure) | |||||||||
| 4. Number of re-interventions- 11 | a) 1/3- treated with antibiotics | ||||||||
| b) 2/3- endoscopic placement of pigtail stent via LAMS | |||||||||
| 3. Bile leak with peritonitis- 1/8- Day 3 post procedure (required percutaneous drain) | |||||||||
| 4. Abdominal pain- 1/8-due to food occluding trans-gastric LAMS (evacuation of food, balloon dilation of granulation overgrowth and pigtail stent placement via LAMS) | |||||||||
| 5. Sepsis- 1/8- perforated GB leading to death | |||||||||
| Irani et al. (2017) [ | Percutaneous transhepatic drainage of GB (PT-GBD)- 45 | 1. Median age- 75 (34–94) | Success- 45/45 (100%) ( | 1. Success- 41/45 (91%) ( | 265 (range, 1–1,638) days | Not applicable | Composite procedure related AE- 14 | ||
| 2.Gender distribution- | 2. Median pain score on post procedure Day 1- 6.5 (range, 2–10) ( | 1. Recurrent cholecystitis- 4/14 (Trt with Abx and drain exchange) | |||||||
| a) F- 18 | 3. Median hospital stay post intervention- 9 (range, 1–121) ( | a) 1/4- drain dislodgement on post procedure day 8 | |||||||
| b) M- 27 | 4. Number of re-interventions- 112 ( | b) 3/4- drain occlusion on post procedure 2, 4 and 6 mo | |||||||
| 2. Abdominal pain without cholecystitis- 3/14 (drain occlusion Trt with exchange) | |||||||||
| 3. Cellulitis- 1/14 (Trt with oral Abx) | |||||||||
| 4. Bile leak- 3/14 | |||||||||
| a) 1/3- lead to sepsis and death | |||||||||
| b) 2/3- additional drain placement | |||||||||
| 5. Sepsis- 2/14 (lead to death) | |||||||||
| 6. Jejunal fistula- 1/14 (allowed track to mature followed by EUS-GBD) | |||||||||
| Walter et al. (2016) [ | Prospective Multicenter | 30 | Indication- Acute calculous and acalculous cholecystitis (poor surgical candidates) | 1. Median age- 85 (range, 68–97) | 27/30 (90%) | 26/27 (96%) | 1. 298±82 days for all patients | 1. Stent left | Composite procedure related AE- 6 |
| 2. Gender distribution | 2. 364±82 days for patients alive at the end of study | 2. Stent retrieved- 15/30 | 1. Recurrent cholecystitis- 2/6 (due to LAMS obstruction requiring its removal) | ||||||
| a) F- 19 | 2. Aspiration pneumonia- 1/6 (leading to death) | ||||||||
| b) M- 11 | 3. Pancreatic infection- 1/6 (leading to death) | ||||||||
| 4. Melena/ thrombus in GB- 1/6 (resolved with conservative management) | |||||||||
| 5. Jaundice (hemobilia)- 1/6 (resolved with conservative management) |
GB, gall bladder; LFT, liver function tests; AE, adverse events; Mx, management; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; N/A, not available; SEMS, self-expandable metal stent; LAMS, lumen-apposing metal stent; EUS-GBD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage; PT-GBD, percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage; Trt, treatment; Abx, antibiotics.
Technical Details of Procedure across Each Study
| Study Location | Type of study | Number of Patients | Site of approach (gastric or duodenum) | Needle size | Stent specifics | Accessory equipment | Anesthesia | Procedure duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de la Serna-Higuera et al. (2013) [ | Retrospective Case series | 13 | 1. Transgastric- 12/13 | 19 G | A. LAMS- | 1. Linear echoendoscope | N/A | N/A |
| 2. Transduodenal- 1/13 | 1. 10×10 mm- 7/11 | 2. 0.035 inch guidewire | ||||||
| 2. 15×10 mm- 4/11 | 3. 8.5 F Cystotome | |||||||
| 3. Flange diameter- 20 mm (11/11) | 4. 4 mm biliary balloon dilator | |||||||
| B. Coaxial SEMS within LAMS- 4/11 | 5. 10 mm balloon dilator | |||||||
| Itoi et al. (2013) [ | Case Report | 1 | Transgastric- 1/1 | 19 G | A. LAMS | 1. Linear echoendoscope | N/A | N/A |
| 1. 10×10 mm- 1/1 | 2. 4 mm balloon dilator | |||||||
| 2. Flange diameter- 20 mm (1/1) | ||||||||
| Itoi et al. (2014) [ | Case Report | 1 | Transgastric- 1/1 | N/A | A. LAMS | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 1. Diameter- 15 mm | ||||||||
| Tharian et al. (2016) [ | Case Report | 1 | Transduodenal- 1/1 | 19 G | N/A | 1. Linear echoendoscope | N/A | N/A |
| 2. 0.025 inch guidewire | ||||||||
| 3. 4 mm balloon dilator | ||||||||
| Irani et al. (2015) [ | Multicenter Retrospective | 15 | Transduodenal- 14/15 | 19 G | A. LAMS | 1. Linear echoendoscope | General anesthesia | 1. Median- 38 (range, 15–52) min |
| Transgastric- 1/15 | 1. 10×10 mm- 12/15 | 2. 0.025 inch visiglidewire or 0.035 inch jagwire | ||||||
| 2. 15×10 mm- 3/15 | ||||||||
| 3. Flange Diameter- | 3. 4 mm balloon dilator or 6 F/7 F tapered dilator | |||||||
| a)21 mm- 12/15 | ||||||||
| b) 24 mm- 3/15 | 4. Over the wire needle knife or 10 F cystotome | |||||||
| B. Stent through LAMS | ||||||||
| 1. 7 F × 4 cm double pig tail stent- 6/15 (prophylactic) | ||||||||
| 2. 10×6 cm fully covered biliary metal stent- 1/15 | ||||||||
| Kumta et al. (2016) [ | Case Report | 1 | Transduodenal- 1/1 | N/A | A. LAMS with cautery | 1. Linear echoendoscope | N/A | N/A |
| 1. 15×10 mm | 2. Guidewire | |||||||
| 3. Balloon dilator | ||||||||
| Law et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective Single center Case series | 7 | Transduodenal- 7 | 19 G | A. LAMS (diameter/length) | 1. Linear echoendoscope | N/A | N/A |
| 1. 10×10 mm- 5/7 | 2. 450 cm- biliary guidewire | |||||||
| 2. 15×10 mm- 2/7 | 3. Cystostome (10 Fr) or balloon dilator | |||||||
| B. Stent through LAMS- 5/7 | ||||||||
| 1. Double pig tail stent (7 F × 4 cm)- 3/7 | ||||||||
| 2. Biliary SEMS (10×6 cm) + double pig tail stent (7 F × 4 cm)- 1/7 | ||||||||
| 3. Biliary SEMS (10 mm × 6 cm)+biliary SEMS (10 mm × 4 cm)- 1/7 | ||||||||
| Dollhopf et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective Single center | 75 | Transduodenal- 38 | 1. 19 G- 32/75 (42.7%) | A. LAMS (diameter/length) with cautery | 1. Linear echoendoscope | 1. Anesthesia monitored | Mean- 26 (range, 8–60) min |
| Transgastric- 36 | 2. No needle use- 43/75 (LAMS cautery) | 1. 10×10 mm- 65/75 | 2. 0.035 inch guidewire | |||||
| Transjejunal- 1 | 2. 15×10 mm- 7/75 | |||||||
| 3. 8×8 mm- 2/75 | ||||||||
| 4. 6×8 mm- 1/75 | ||||||||
| Irani et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective Multicenter | EUS-GBD-45 | 1. Transduodenal- 32/45 | 19 G | A. LAMS | 1. Linear echoendoscope | General anesthesia-40/45 | Mean- 28 (range, 18–52) min |
| 2. Transgastric- 13/45 | 1. 10×10 mm- 37/45 | 2. 0.035 inch Jagwire or 0.025 inch visiglide wire | ||||||
| 2. 15×10 mm- 8/45 | ||||||||
| 3. Flange diameter- 21 or 24 mm | 3. 4 mm biliary balloon dilator | |||||||
| 4. Saddle length- 10 mm (45/45) | 4. 10 F cystostome or needle knife or blank | |||||||
| B. Stent through LAMS- | ||||||||
| 1. Plastic pigtail stent- 24/45 | ||||||||
| PT-GBD-45 | Percutaneous transhepatic | N/A | 8 or 10 F self locking pigtail catheter | N/A | General anesthesia-5/45 (p<0.0001) | Mean- 22 (range, 12–30) min ( | ||
| Walter et al. (2016) [ | Prospective Multicenter | 30 | Transduodenal- 19/30 | 19 G | A. LAMS | 1. Linear echoendoscope | 1. Monitored anesthesia (propofol)- 4/30 | Median- 15 (range, 13–110) min |
| Transgastric- 11/30 | 1. 10×10 mm- 13/30 | 2. 0.035 inch guidewire | 2. Concious sedation (fentanyl and midazolam)- 26/30 | |||||
| 2. 15×10 mm- 17/30 | 3. Cystostome or balloon dilator |
LAMS, lumen-apposing metal stent; SEMS, self-expandable metal stent; N/A, not available; EUS-GBD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage; PT-GBD, percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage.