| Literature DB >> 33269311 |
Giuseppe Vanella1,2, Michiel Bronswijk1, Geert Maleux3, Hannah van Malenstein1, Wim Laleman1, Schalk Van der Merwe1.
Abstract
Background and study aims Endoscopic ultrasound-guided intrahepatic biliary drainage (EUS-IBD) struggles to find a place in management algorithms, especially compared to percutaneous drainage (PTBD). In the setting of hilar stenoses or postsurgical anatomy data are even more limited. Patients and methods All consecutive EUS-IBDs performed in our tertiary referral center between 2012 - 2019 were retrospectively evaluated. Rendez-vous (RVs), antegrade stenting (AS) and hepatico-gastrostomies (HGs) were compared. The predefined subgroup of EUS-IBD patients with proximal stenosis/surgically-altered anatomy was matched 1:1 with PTBD performed for the same indications. Efficacy, safety and events during follow-up were compared. Results One hundred four EUS-IBDs were included (malignancies = 87.7 %). These consisted of 16 RVs, 43 ASs and 45 HGs. Technical and clinical success rates were 89.4 % and 96.2 %, respectively. Any-degree, severe and fatal adverse events (AEs) occurred in 23.3 %, 2.9 %, and 0.9 % respectively. Benign indications were more common among RVs while proximal stenoses, surgically-altered anatomy, and disconnected left ductal system among HGs. Procedures were shorter with HGs performed with specifically designed stents (25 vs . 48 minutes, P = 0.004) and there was also a trend toward less dysfunction with those stents (6.7 % vs . 30 %, P = 0.09) compared with previous approaches. Among patients with proximal stenosis/surgically-altered anatomy, EUS-IBD vs. PTBD showed higher rates of clinical success (97.4 % vs. 79.5 %, P = 0.01), reduced post-procedural pain (17.8 % vs. 44.4 %, p = 0.004), shorter median hospital stay (7.5 vs 11.5 days, P = 0.01), lower rates of stent dysfunction (15.8 % vs. 42.9 %, P = 0.01), and the mean number of reinterventions was lower (0.4 vs. 2.8, P < 0.0001). Conclusions EUS-IBD has high technical and clinical success with an acceptable safety profile. HGs show comparable outcomes, which are likely to further improve with dedicated tools. For proximal strictures and surgically-altered anatomy, EUS-IBD seems superior to PTBD. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commecial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33269311 PMCID: PMC7671754 DOI: 10.1055/a-1264-7511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endosc Int Open ISSN: 2196-9736
Fig. 1Selection of patients. Between January 2012 and October 2019, 104 EUS-IBDs were performed. After transgastric intrahepatic access, e-RV was performed in 16 patients (15.4 %), e-AS in 43 (43.3 %) and e-HG in 45 (41.3 %). Outcomes of these three techniques were compared. We then identified EUS-IBDs performed for hilar/intrahepatic stenosis or in the setting of postsurgical anatomy. These procedures were matched to one PTBD case from an historical cohort of PTBDs executed in the same time frame, using the criteria described in the text. Finally, outcomes of 45 EUS-IBDs and 45 PTBD were compared.
Fig. 2Endoscopic and percutaneous procedures described in this paper. Top: procedures following EUS-guided intrahepatic access. a EUS-guided rendez-vous (e-RV) when EUS-IBD was used to allow antegrade transpapillary placement of a guidewire used for final retrograde therapeutic procedure (cannulation over or next to the guidewire). b EUS-guided antegrade stenting (e-AS) when a metal stent was advanced transgastric and transhepatic over a guidewire and finally placed bypassing a stenosis. c EUS-guided hepatico-gastrostomies (e-HG) when the drainage was guaranteed through the placement of a self-expanding metal stent (SEMS) between the left intrahepatic duct and the stomach. Bottom: Percutaneous procedures. d Percutaneous external drainage (p-ED) when the stenosis could not be passed and drainage was obtained through a transhepatic externally-placed catheter connected to a drainage bag. e Percutaneous external/internal drainage (p-EID) when a drainage was placed with an external trans-cutaneous tip and an internal transpapillary tip in the duodenum. f Percutaneous antegrade stenting (p-AS) when a metal stent was advanced transhepatic and finally placed bypassing a stenosis.
Fig. 3Hepaticogastrostomy. a Transgastric EUS-guided puncture of a dilated duct of left liver lobe. b Contrast injection and guidewire cannulation of the biliary tree. c After tract consolidation through cystotome, placement of a partially-covered SEMS with an uncovered portion for intrahepatic placement and a covered portion crossing the liver parenchyma and ending in the gastric lumen. d Endoscopic appearance of the covered part of the SEMS inside the gastric lumen.
Characteristics of included patients undergoing EUS-IBD.
| Variable | Total N = 104 |
| Age, median [IQR] | 67 [61 – 77] |
| Male, n (%) | 56 (53.8 %) |
| Indication | |
Malignancy, n (%) | 87 (83.7 %) |
Pancreatic cancer | 45 |
Cholangiocarcinoma | 15 |
Metastasis | 22 |
Ampulloma/duodenal carcinoma | 5 |
Benign disease, n (%) | 17 (16.3 %) |
Benign stricture | 11 |
Anastomotic | 5 |
Acute or chronic pancreatitis | 6 |
Choledocholithiasis | 6 |
| Level of stenosis, n (%) | |
Distal | 52 (50 %) |
Hilar | 30 (28.8 %) |
Anastomotic | 15 (14.4 %) |
Intrahepatic | 1 (1 %) |
Absent (choledocholithiasis) | 6 (5.8 %) |
| Disconnected left biliary system, n (%) | 27 (26 %) |
| Reasons for transgastric approach | |
Failed ERCP, n (%) | 81 (77.9 %) |
Papillary region inaccessible (stenosis/infiltration) | 35 |
Failed biliary cannulation | 45 |
Stenosis not manageable by ERCP | 1 |
Surgery impeding retrograde approach, n (%) | 23 (22.1 %) |
Whipple resection | 14 |
Hepatico-enterostomy after biliary/liver resections | 5 |
Distal gastrectomy | 3 |
Palliative gastro-enterostomy and hepatico-enterostomy | 1 |
| Procedure | |
EUS-guided transgastric ERCP rendez-vous (e-RV) | 16 (15.4 %) |
EUS-guided transgastric antegrade biliary stenting (e-AS) | 43 (43.3 %) |
EUS-guided hepaticogastrostomy (e-HG) | 45 (41.3 %) |
Presence of ascites, n (%) | 18/92 (19.5 %) |
Presence of liver metastases, n (%) | 23/91 (25.3 %) |
EUS-IBD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided intrahepatic biliary drainage; IQR, interquartile range; EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
General Outcomes of EUS-IBDs.
| Variable | Total N = 104 |
| Technical success | |
Technical failures, n (%) | 11 (10.6 %) |
Biliary tree never opacified | 4 |
Impossible guidewire cannulation | 2 |
Guidewire dislocation after access | 2 |
Impossible to place a HG | 2 |
Scope-related technical issues | 1 |
Successful intrahepatic access and guidewire cannulation, n (%) | 93/104 (89.4 %) |
Multiple biliary punctures required | 5 |
Hepaticogastrostomy stent misplacement, saved intraprocedurally with coaxial FC-SEMS | 5 |
Impossibility to place the guidewire transpapillary → extrahepatic EUS-guided drainage preferred over HG | 6 |
Complete technical success, n (%) | 87/104 (83.7 %) |
Median procedural length [IQR], minutes | 35 [24 – 56] |
| Clinical success | |
Complete procedures, n (%) | N = 87 |
Treatment of choledocholithiasis | 4/4 |
Biliary stenosis
|
72/75
|
Overall clinical success, n (%)
| 76/79 (96.2 %) |
| Adverse events | |
Available follow-up | N = 103 |
No clinical event, n (%) | 60 (58.3 %) |
Mild self-limiting post-procedural pain, n (%) | 19 (18.4 %) |
Overall adverse events rate, n (%) | 24 (23.3 %) |
| Timing, n | |
Intraprocedural | 3 |
Same-day post-procedural | 11 |
Early (< 7 days) | 10 |
Late | 0 |
| Type, n | |
Perforation (2/2 surgical management) | 2 |
Bleeding | 3 |
Mild hemobilia (no management required) | 1/3 |
Hemorrhagic shock (endovascular treatment)
| 1/3 |
Hemoperitoneum (treated conservatively) | 1/3 |
Bile leak + peritonitis (treated conservatively) | 1 |
Cholangitis | 9 |
Bacteremia | 3 |
Acute pancreatitis | 4 |
Severe abdominal pain | 2 |
| Severity (ASGE lexicon), n (%) | |
Mild/moderate | 20/103 (19.4 %) |
Severe | 3/103 (2.9 %) |
Fatal | 1/103 (0.9 %) |
| Median post-procedural length of hospital stay [IQR], days | |
All patients with available follow-up (N = 79) | 7 [3 – 10] |
No clinical event |
4.5 [1 – 9]
|
Mild post-procedural pain |
7 [3.5 – 8]
|
Patients with adverse events |
10.5 [6 – 16.5]
|
| Follow-up | |
|
Stent dysfunction
| |
Median post-procedural FU (N = 71) | 57 days [16.3 – 135.8] |
No stent dysfunction, n (%) | 60/71 (84.5 %) |
Stent dysfunction, n (%) | 11/71 (15.5 %) |
Stent migration | 1 |
Stent obstruction (clots/ingrowth) | 10 |
Time to dysfunction [IQR], days | 96 [51.5 – 167] |
| Rescue procedures | |
None | 2 |
ERCP | 4 |
New HG | 3 (1 using the same fistula) |
SEMS-in-SEMS of the HG | 1 |
Plastic stenting of the HG | 1 |
1, 3, 6, 12 months probability of no dysfunction
| 98.1 %, 87 %, 68.5 %, 61.7 % |
| Median number of reinterventions, [IQR] | 0 [0 – 0] |
EUS-IBD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided intrahepatic biliary drainage; HG, hepaticogastrostomy; FCSEM, fully-covered self-expanding metal stent; EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; IQR, interquartile range; FU, follow-up.
Excluding lost-to-follow-up (N = 8)
Fatal event
P = 0.005 of Kruskal-Wallis test for 3-groups comparison, post-hoc analysis showing significantly different length only between patients with adverse events versus each other subgroup.
Per-protocol; among patients with biliary stenosis and successful stent placement
Kaplan-Meier curves
Comparison of the three EUS-IBD techniques.
| Variable | e-RV (N = 16) | e-AS (N = 45) | e-HG (N = 43) |
|
| Clinical indication | ||||
| Proportion of malignant indication, n (%) | 8 (50 %) | 41 (91.1 %) | 38 (88.4 %) |
0.0004
|
| Level of the stenosis, n (%) |
< 0.0001
| |||
| None (choledocholithiasis) | 6 (37.5 %) | 0 | 0 | |
| Distal | 9 (56.2 %) | 32 (71.1 %) | 11 (25.6 %) | |
| Hilar/intrahepatic | 1 (6.2 %) | 8 (17.8 %) | 22 (51.2 %) | |
| Anastomotic (after surgical hepatico-enterostomy) | 0 | 5 (11.1 %) | 10 (23.3 %) | |
| Reason for the transgastric approach, n (%) |
0.01
| |||
| Surgery impeding access to papillary region | 0 | 9 (20 %) | 14 (32.6 %) | |
| Papillary region inaccessible for stenosis/infiltration | 4 (25 %) | 22 (48.9 %) | 9 (20.9 %) | |
| Failed ERCP cannulation | 12 (75 %) | 14 (31.1 %) | 19 (44.2 %) | |
| Successful ERCP but unnegotiable stenosis | 0 | 0 | 1 (2.3 %) | |
| “Disconnected ductal system”, n (%) | 1 (6.2 %) | 3 (6.7 %) | 23 (53.5 %) |
< 0.0001
|
| Efficacy | ||||
| Technical success, n (%) |
0.04
| |||
| Successful access and complete treatment | 10 (62.5 %) | 39 (86.7 %) | 38 (88.4 %) | |
| Successful biliary cannulation but uncomplete procedure | 2 (12.5 %) | 4 (8.9 %) | 0 | |
| Technical failure, n (%) | 4 (25 %) | 2 (4.4 %) | 5 (11.6 %) | |
| Clinical success, n (%) | 8/8 (100 %) | 32/33 (97 %) | 36/38 (94.7 %) | 0.74 |
|
Bilirubin decrease ≥ 25 %, n (%)
| 2/3 (66.7 %) | 28/29 (96.6 %) | 27/31 (87.1 %) | 0.16 |
|
Bilirubin decrease ≥ 50 %, n (%)
| 2/3 (66.7 %) | 26/29 (89.7 %) | 16/31 (51.6 %) |
0.01
|
|
Stent dysfunction, n (%)
| 0/4 (0 %) | 4/32 (12.5 %) | 7/35 (20 %) | 0.47 |
|
Median time to dysfunction [IQR], days
| – | 101 [49.5 – 147.5] | 96 [51.5 – 182] |
0.71
|
| Safety | ||||
|
Acute increase of inflammatory markers, n (%)
| 4/6 (66.7 %) | 23/26 (88.5 %) | 21/31 (67.7 %) | 0.16 |
| Adverse events, n (%) | 0.83 | |||
| Mild abdominal pain | 3/15 (20 %) | 7/45 (15.6 %) | 9/43 (20.9 %) | |
| Any adverse events | 2/15 (13.3 %) | 11/45 (24.4 %) | 11/43 (25.6 %) | |
| Severe adverse events | 0/2 (0 %) | 2/11 (18.2 %) | 2/11 (18.2 %) | 0.8 |
| Median post-procedural survival [IQR], days | 76 [59.8 – 428.8] | 61 [39 – 185] | 50 [24.3 – 156] |
0.24
|
EUS-IBD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided intrahepatic biliary drainage; IQR, interquartile range; EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
Statistically significant
Per-protocol; among patients with pre-procedural bilirubin elevation
Per-protocol; among patients with biliary stenosis and successful stent placement
No different probability of dysfunction-free survival at log-rank test (p = 0.1908)
Among patients with technical success
Higher probability of survival among patients undergoing e-RV versus e-AG (HR = 2 [1.1 – 3.6]) and e-HG (HR = 2.1 [1.1 – 3.9]); log-rank test ( P = 0.1186)
EUS-IBD versus percutaneous biliary drainage for patients with proximal stenosis or post-surgical anatomy.
| Variable | EUS-IBD (N = 45) | PTBD (N = 45) |
|
| Matched variables | |||
| Proportion of malignant indication, n (%) | 40 (88.9 %) | 40 (88.9 %) | 1 |
| Level of the stenosis, n (%) | 1 | ||
| Anastomotic | 15 (33.3 %) | 15 (33.3 %) | |
| Hilar/Intrahepatic | 30 (66.7 %) | 30 (66.7 %) | |
| “Disconnected ductal system”, n (%) | 26 (57.8 %) | 26 (57.8 %) | 1 |
| Age [IQR], years | 67 [60.5 – 76] | 67 [62.3 – 74.5] | 0.96 |
| Other Variables | |||
| Male sex | 23 (51.1 %) | 30 (66.7 %) | 0.1 |
| Previous failed ERCP | 18 (40 %) | 18 (40 %) | 1 |
| Previous biliary drainage | 17 (38.6 %) | 8 (17.8 %) |
0.03
|
| Median bilirubin [IQR], mg/dl | 5.1 [2.6 – 10.2] | 8.3 [2.9 – 13.3] | 0.2 |
| Efficacy | |||
| Technical success, n (%) | 42 (93.3 %) | 44 (97.8 %) | 0.31 |
| Available FU | N = 39 | N = 44 | |
| Clinical success, n (%) | 38 (97.4 %) | 35 (79.5 %) |
0.01
|
|
Median bilirubin decrease [IQR], mg/dL
| 2.6 [1.2 – 5.2] (N = 33) | 4.2 [0.9 – 7] (N = 39) | 0.64 |
|
Time to bilirubin decrease [IQR], days
| 7 [5 – 11] | 6 [3 – 16] | 0.44 |
|
Bilirubin decrease ≥ 25 %, n (%)
| 30 /33 (90.9 %) | 31 /39 (79.5 %) | 0.18 |
|
Bilirubin decrease ≥ 50 %, n (%)
| 18 /33 (54.5 %) | 20 /39 (51.3 %) | 0.78 |
| Procedural time [IQR], minutes | 35 [24.8 – 60.3] | 45 [28.5 – 69.5] | 0.23 |
| Median hospital stay [IQR], days | 7.5 [2 – 10] (N = 34) | 11.5 [7 – 21.5] (N = 44) |
0.01
|
| Safety |
0.004
| ||
| No post-procedural event, n (%) | 29 (64.4 %) | 14 (31.1 %) | |
| Mild post-procedural pain, n (%) | 8 (17.8 %) | 20 (44.4 %) | |
| Adverse events, n (%) | 8 (17.8 %) | 11 (24.4 %) | |
| Severe adverse events, n (%) | 1 (2.2 %) | 0 (0 %) | 0.32 |
| Follow-up | |||
|
Stent dysfunction, n (%)
| 6 /38 (15.8 %) | 15 /35 (42.9 %) |
0.01
|
| Median time to dysfunction [IQR], days | 118 [77 – 196] | 81 [20 – 157] |
0.31
|
| Median number of reinterventions [IQR] | 0 [0 – 0] | 1 [0.25 – 3], |
< 0.0001
|
|
Median post-procedural survival (95 %CI)
| 91 (95 %CI 50 – 168) | 119 (95 %CI 77 – 250) |
0.61
|
EUS-IBD, endoscopic ultrasound-guided intrahepatic biliary drainage; PTBD, percutaneous biliary drainage; IQR, interquartile range; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography.
Statistically significant
Per-protocol; among patients with available data and pre-procedural elevation
Per-protocol; among patients with clinical success and available follow-up
N differences in dysfunction-free survival at log-rank test ( P = 0.56)
Based on the log-rank test at Kaplan-Meier statistics.
Fig. 4Proposed algorithm for the management of biliary obstruction. In case of postsurgical anatomy, when papillary region is not accessible, EUS-guided intrahepatic biliary drainage (EUS-IBD) may represent the first-line treatment modality. In case of biliary stenosis and failed ERCP: 1) when stenosis is distal and the common bile duct is significantly dilated we propose extrahepatic drainage through an electrocautery-enhanced LAMS as the first-line treatment; 2) when the stenosis is proximal and determines a dilation of the left biliary tree we propose EUS-IBD as the first-line treatment; and 3) when the stenosis determines an isolated dilation of the right biliary tree (or other modalities have failed) we propose percutaneous biliary drainage (PTBD). *The cut-off included in the algorithm is taken from studies cited in the text, but may vary according to specific cases and local expertise. # Post-surgical anatomy impeding access to papillary area (e. g. pancreaticoduodenectomy), with the exception of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass.