| Literature DB >> 31405265 |
Hao Chi Zhang1,2, Monica Tamil2, Keshav Kukreja2, Shashideep Singhal3.
Abstract
Concomitant malignant gastric outlet obstruction and biliary obstruction may occur in patients with advanced cancers affecting these anatomical regions. This scenario presents a unique challenge to the endoscopist in selecting an optimal management approach. We sought to determine the efficacy and safety of endoscopic techniques for treating simultaneous gastric outlet and biliary obstruction (GOBO) with endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) guidance for biliary drainage. An extensive literature search for peer-reviewed published cases yielded 6 unique case series that either focused on or included the use of EUS-guided biliary drainage (EUS-BD) with simultaneous gastroduodenal stenting. In our composite analysis, a total of 51 patients underwent simultaneous biliary drainage through EUS, with an overall reported technical success rate of 100% for both duodenal stenting and biliary drainage. EUS-guided choledochoduodenostomy or EUS-guided hepaticogastrostomy was employed as the initial technique. In 34 cases in which clinical success was ascribed, 100% derived clinical benefit. The common adverse effects of double stenting included cholangitis, stent migration, bleeding, food impaction, and pancreatitis. We conclude that simultaneous double stenting with EUS-BD and gastroduodenal stenting for GOBO is associated with high success rates. It is a feasible and practical alternative to percutaneous biliary drainage or surgery for palliation in patients with associated advanced malignancies.Entities:
Keywords: Biliary tract; Duodenal obstruction; Endoscopy, digestive system; Gastrointestinal neoplasms; Ultrasonography, interventional
Year: 2019 PMID: 31405265 PMCID: PMC7137573 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2019.050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Types of Stenosis in Gastric Outlet Obstruction
| Type of stenosis | Definition (anatomy involvement) |
|---|---|
| Type 1 | Proximal to and with no involvement ampulla of Vater |
| Type 2 | Second part of the duodenum with involvement of ampulla of Vater |
| Type 3 | Third part of the duodenum, not including ampulla of Vater |
Cases of Simultaneous Duodenal Stent and Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Biliary Drainage for Gastric Outlet and Biliary Obstruction
| Study | No. of patients[ | EUS-BD technique | Technical success, EUS-BD (No., %) | Technical success, DuS (No., %) | Clinical success (oral intake, No., %) | Non-mortality-related rate of post-endoscopy adverse events (early or late) | Biliary stent and/or DuS dysfunction (No., %) | Subsequent need for surgery after stent dysfunction | Biliary stent type | Duodenal stent type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iwamuro et al. (2010) [ | 2 | EUS-CDS | 2/2 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | Early: 1/2 (50%) | Biliary: 2/2 (100%)[ | 0% | PS (7 Fr 50 mm or 7 Fr 40 mm) | 8 cm × 20 mm SEMS (Niti-S; TaeWoong Medical, Seoul, Korea)[ |
| Late: 0/2 (0%) | ||||||||||
| Kawakubo et al. (2012) [ | 2 | EUS-CDS | 2/2 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | Early: 0/2 (0%) | Biliary: 0/2 (0%) | 0% | 7 Fr straight PS (Flexima; Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA) | Uncovered SEMS, WallFlex; covered SEMS (ComVi; TaeWoong Medical) |
| Late: 0/2 (0%) | ||||||||||
| Rebello et al. (2012) [ | 7 | EUS-CDS | 7/7 (100%) | 7/7 (100%) | 7/7 (100%) | Early: 0/7 (0%) | Biliary: 1/7 (14.3%) | 0% | Partially covered self-expandable metal stents (WallFlex) (8×60 mm; 10×60 mm; 10×80 mm) | SEMS (18×90 mm; 18×110 mm; 22×60 mm; 22×90 mm) |
| Late: 1/7 (14.3%) | ||||||||||
| Tonozuka et al. (2013) [ | 4 | EUS-CDS; EUS-HGS | 4/4 (100%) | 4/4 (100%) | 4/4 (100%) | Early: 0/4 (0%) | Biliary: 0/2 (0%) | 0% | Not specified | 10 cm × 20 mm Niti-S; 6–9 cm × 22 mm WallFlex[ |
| Late: 2/4 (50%) | ||||||||||
| Sato et al. (2016) [ | 17 | EUS-CDS; EUS-HGS | 17/17 (100%)[ | 17/17 (100%)[ | N/A[ | Early: 5/43 (12%)[ | N/A[ | 0% | EUS-CDS: | Uncovered Niti-S and WallFlex stents (6, 8 10, 12 cm × 20 or 22 mm) |
| Late: 3/43 (7%)[ | Fully covered stent (WallFlex) (4 and 6 cm × 10 mm | |||||||||
| EUS-HGS: | ||||||||||
| Fully covered stent (Niti-S) | ||||||||||
| Matsumoto et al. (2017) [ | 19 | EUS-CDS; EUS-HGS | 19/19 (100%) | 19/19 (100%) | 19/19 (100%) | N/A[ | DuS: 3/19 (15.8%); biliary stent by EUSBD: 8/19 (42.1%)[ | N/A | Covered 10 mm × 6 cm stents (WallFlex or Bonastent; Sewoon Medical, Seoul, Korea); PS (Flexima or Zimmon [Cook Medical, Winston-Salem, NC, USA]) | 20-mm covered SEMS (Niti-S); 20-mm and 22-mm uncovered SEMS (Niti-S or WallFlex) |
DuS, duodenal stent; EUS-BD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary drainage; EUS-CDS, endoscopic ultrasound-guided choledochoduodenostomy; EUS-HGS, endoscopic ultrasound-guided hepaticogastrostomy; N/A, not available; PS, plastic stent; SEMS, self-expanding metal stent.
A total of 144 patients across 5 studies were analyzed; 44 patients were identified having underwent simultaneous EUS-BD and duodenal stenting for gastric outlet obstruction. Since our intent was to isolate only EUS-guided cases of double-stenting, data related to were interpreted and extracted from the associated articles.
EUS-BD patency period was variable: 4.9 weeks and 46.4 weeks for each respective patient.
The use of covered vs. uncovered stent was not explicitly specified.
Because no immediate complications were explicitly attributed to double-stenting in these cases, this was regarded as technical success. However, seven patients later required re-intervention; in re-intervention group, 6 of 7 cases underwent EUS-BD, and 5 of 7 cases were technically successful (71.4%). Re-intervention was not counted against immediate technical success; re-intervention was considered “stent dysfunction”. Because explicit correlation was not made for which of the re-interventions were attributed to the patients who underwent EUS-BD, a percentage could not be calculated.
Clinical success was not explicitly reported for this group of patients.
Due to inability to exactly ascribe each individual case with respective outcomes, this limitation affected interpretation of the proportions. For instance, in the reporting of post-endoscopy adverse events from Sato et al., the proportions could only be derived from a cohort of 43 patients instead of 17 patients.[2]
Biliary sludge and stent migration were described; however, the incidence could not be not quantified based on presentation of data.
Seven cases associated with biliary sludge development; one case associated with biliary stent migration.
Fig. 1.(A) Endoscopic ultrasound image showing a dilated common bile duct (CBD). (B) Cholangiogram demonstrating dilation of the CBD with tapering to the point of obstruction at the distal CBD.
Fig. 2.Endoscopic images of the biliary stent. (A) Successful deployment of a biliary stent through endoscopic ultrasound-guided choledochoduodenostomy, with guidewire assistance. (B) Endoscopic view from the new lumen created by the biliary stent.
Fig. 3.Fluoroscopic image demonstrating successful placement of both biliary and duodenal stents (arrows).
Fig. 4.Proposed algorithm to determine the decision to pursue endoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary drainage (EUS-BD) and simultaneous duodenal stenting and management for initial biliary stent dysfunction. Accessibility to the papilla dictates the endoscopic methodology. After a successful endoscopy, patients should be monitored clinically, including for signs suggesting stent dysfunction. ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; EUS-CDS, endoscopic ultrasound-guided choledochoduodenostomy; EUS-HGS, endoscopic ultrasound-guided hepaticogastrostomy; GOBO, gastric outlet and biliary obstruction; GOO, gastric outlet obstruction; PTBD, percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage.