Chao-Wen Hsu1,2, Chih-Chien Wu3, Min-Hung Lee3, Jui-Ho Wang3, Yu-Hsun Chen4, Min-Chi Chang3. 1. Division of Colorectal Surgery, Kaohsiung Veteran General Hospital, 386 Ta-Chung 1st RD., Kaohsiung, 81346, Taiwan, ROC. ss851124@gmail.com. 2. Faculty of Medicine, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei City, Taiwan, ROC. ss851124@gmail.com. 3. Division of Colorectal Surgery, Kaohsiung Veteran General Hospital, 386 Ta-Chung 1st RD., Kaohsiung, 81346, Taiwan, ROC. 4. Faculty of Medicine, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei City, Taiwan, ROC.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Conventional lesion-up colorectal ESD has the potential risk of iatrogenic perforation due to the knife's direction toward the muscular layer of the bowel wall. If we rotate the endoscope to the proper position, the mucosal flap is easy to be lifted down by tip attachment and the knife is easy to approach the proper dissection plane, which may prevent the perforation and facilitate difficult ESD. METHODS: We aimed to retrospectively assess the safety and efficacy of this rotating technique compared with the conventional lesion-up dissection regardless of shape, location, or size of the tumor, and investigated in short- and long-term outcomes following the ESD procedure. RESULTS: 41 lesions were enrolled into rotating technique group and 37 lesions in lesion-up group. The dissection speed was significantly faster in the rotating technique group (p = 0.023). R0 resection rate was significantly higher in rotating technique group (p = 0.008). The rate of perioperative complication was significantly higher in lesion-up method group (p = 0.003). Local recurrence was higher in lesion-up group (p = 0.001). Recurrence-free rate was higher in rotating technique group (p = 0.018). CONCLUSION: The endoscope rotating is a useful technique for difficult colorectal ESD due to easy approaching the proper dissection plane. This technique also increases the rate of en bloc resections, R0 resections regardless of size, shape, and location and improves dissection speed without increasing the incidence of adverse events.
BACKGROUND: Conventional lesion-up colorectal ESD has the potential risk of iatrogenic perforation due to the knife's direction toward the muscular layer of the bowel wall. If we rotate the endoscope to the proper position, the mucosal flap is easy to be lifted down by tip attachment and the knife is easy to approach the proper dissection plane, which may prevent the perforation and facilitate difficult ESD. METHODS: We aimed to retrospectively assess the safety and efficacy of this rotating technique compared with the conventional lesion-up dissection regardless of shape, location, or size of the tumor, and investigated in short- and long-term outcomes following the ESD procedure. RESULTS: 41 lesions were enrolled into rotating technique group and 37 lesions in lesion-up group. The dissection speed was significantly faster in the rotating technique group (p = 0.023). R0 resection rate was significantly higher in rotating technique group (p = 0.008). The rate of perioperative complication was significantly higher in lesion-up method group (p = 0.003). Local recurrence was higher in lesion-up group (p = 0.001). Recurrence-free rate was higher in rotating technique group (p = 0.018). CONCLUSION: The endoscope rotating is a useful technique for difficult colorectal ESD due to easy approaching the proper dissection plane. This technique also increases the rate of en bloc resections, R0 resections regardless of size, shape, and location and improves dissection speed without increasing the incidence of adverse events.