| Literature DB >> 34215276 |
Fei-Hu Yan1,2, Yao Zhang3, Cheng-Ling Bian4, Xiao-Shuang Liu5, Bing-Chen Chen1, Zhen Wang1, Hao Wang6, E Ji-Fu7, En-da Yu8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Placement of a self-expanding metal stent (SEMS) in patients presenting with an acute colorectal obstruction (ACO) may obviate emergency surgery (ES), potentially effectively palliating incurable tumors, acting as a bridge to surgery (BTS) in patients with operable or potentially operable tumors and achieving effective decompression of other ACO. We present our experience with SEMS insertion by colorectal surgeons without fluoroscopic monitoring for ACO especially for acute malignant colorectal obstruction (AMCO) for nearly a 14-year period (2007-2020). AIM: To explore the safety and effectiveness of SEMS insertion in the management of ACO by colorectal surgeons using a two-person approach colonoscopy without fluoroscopic monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: Benign colorectal diseases; Colorectal cancer; Colorectal stenting; Extra-luminal compression; Large bowel obstruction; Learning curve; No fluoroscopy guiding; Recurrent tumor
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34215276 PMCID: PMC8254346 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-021-02309-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Fig. 1Axial computed tomography images demonstrating an obstructing carcinoma with gross proximal colonic dilatation (a). After successful decompression by stenting (b)
Fig. 2Flexible guide wire passed through the obstructive lesion (a). Stent was inserted along the guide wire across the obstruction (b). Endoscopic confirmation of appropriate stent placement, with visualization of the distal end of the stent within a normal lumen below the tumor (c)
Fig. 3Fluoroscopic image: obstructive state before stent implantation (a). Depicting the correct position and the expansion of stent (b)
Patient demographics (n/434, %)
| Characteristic | Overall (n = 434) | BTS (n = 277, 63.8%) | Palliative stents (n = 124, 28.6%) | Others (n = 33, 7.6%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recurrent tumor (n = 10) | Benign diseases (n = 10) | Extra-luminal compression (n = 13) | ||||
| 63.49 ± 15.10 | 61.26 ± 14.04 | 69.62 ± 16.17 | 58.50 ± 13.88 | 58.70 ± 12.28 | 60.15 ± 14.06 | |
| Male | 302, 69.6% | 205, 74.0% | 78, 62.9% | 19, 57.6% | ||
| Female | 132, 30.4% | 72, 26.0% | 46, 37.1% | 14, 42.4% | ||
| Yes | 126, 29.0% | 82, 29.6% | 39, 31.5% | 5, 15.2% | ||
| No | 308, 71.0% | 195, 70.4% | 85, 68.5% | 28, 84.8% | ||
Overall clinic outcomes of stenting (n, %)
| Characteristic | (434, %) |
|---|---|
| Overall technique success rate | 428, 98.6% |
| Overall clinic success rate | 412, 94.9% |
| Overall complication rate | 19, 4.4% |
| Overall perforation rate | 6, 1.4% |
| Overall ES required | 21, 4.8% |
| Distribution area of obstruction | |
| Right hemicolon | 33, 7.6% |
| Transverse colon | 15, 3.5% |
| Left hemicolon | 386, 88.9% |
Indications for stenting and tumor location respectively (n, %)
| Location of obstruction | Indications |
|---|---|
| Ascending colon | 5, 1.8% |
| Hepatic flexure | 17, 6.1% |
| Transverse colon | 6, 2.2% |
| Splenic flexure | 22, 7.9% |
| Descending colon | 44, 15.9% |
| Descending sigmoid colon | 28, 10.1% |
| Sigmoid colon | 84, 30.3% |
| Recto-sigmoid colon | 31, 11.2% |
| Rectal (1NEC) | 40, 14.4% |
| Ascending colon | 1, 0.8% |
| Hepatic flexure | 10, 8.1% |
| Transverse colon | 7, 5.6% |
| Splenic flexure | 6, 4.8% |
| Descending colon | 18, 14.5% |
| Descending sigmoid colon | 5, 4.0% |
| Sigmoid colon | 37, 29.8% |
| Recto-sigmoid | 17, 13.7% |
| Rectal | 23, 18.5% |
| Recurrent tumor | 10, 30.3% |
| Sigmoid colon | 2 |
| Rectal | 8 |
| Benign diseases | 10, 30.3% |
| SLE | 1 |
| Anastomotic stenosis | 7 |
| Inflammatory stenosis | 1 |
| Foreign-body granuloma | 1 |
| Extra-luminal compression | 13, 39.4% |
| Transverse colon | 1 |
| Splenic flexure | 3 |
| Descending colon | 1 |
| Descending sigmoid colon | 1 |
| Sigmoid colon | 1 |
| Rectal | 6 |
Clinic outcomes of stenting (n/N, %)
| Characteristic | Palliative stents (n = 124) | BTS (n = 277) | Others (n = 33) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recurrent tumor (n = 10) | Benign diseases (n = 10) | Extra-luminal compression (n = 13) | |||
| Technique success rate | 121, 97.6% | 274, 98.9% | 10, 100% | 10, 100% | 13, 100% |
| Clinic success rate | 118, 95.2% | 261, 94.2% | 10, 100% | 10, 100% | 13, 100% |
| Complication rate | 4, 3.2% | 13, 4.7% | 0, 0% | 2, 20% | 0, 0% |
| ES required | 6, 4.8% | 15, 5.4% | 0, 0% | 0, 0% | 0, 0% |
| Subsequent surgery required | 7, 5.6% | 258, 93.1% | 2, 20% | 5, 50% | 2, 15.4% |
| Re-stenting | 2, 1.6% | 2, 0.7% | 0, 0% | 0, 0% | 0, 0% |
Fig. 4Mal-positioning result in stent occlusion-related iatrogenic acute obstruction
Clinic outcomes of BTS (258, %)
| Characteristic | Number (n) | Stoma (n, %) | Operation method (n, %) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laparoscopic assisted | Minilaparotomy | Open | |||
| Right hemicolectomy | 23, 8.9% | 0 | 5 (1 hand assisted laparoscopy) | 10 | 8 |
| Transverse colon resection | 3, 1.1% | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| Left half colon resection | 83, 32.2% | 1 | 19 | 23 | 41 |
| Anterior resection | 132, 51.2% | 18 | 27 | 32 | 73 |
| Subtotal colectomy | 3, 1.1% | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Hartmann’s | 10, 3.9% | 3 | 3 | 4 | |
| Miles | 3, 1.1% | 0 | 0 | 3 | |
| Stoma | 1, 0.4% | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Overall | 258, 100% | 22, 8.5% | 55, 21.3% | 68, 26.4% | 135, 52.3% |
Fig. 5Surgical incision of left hemicolectomy by minilaparotomy operation in our center: 4–6 cm incision length (a). Successful decompression without intestinal wall edema (b). Removed bowel (c). Stent in the correct position (d)
Fig. 6Re-stent for re-obstruction caused by local tumor ingrowth: flexible guide wire passed through the first stent (a). A second stent was inserted along the guide wire across the original stent (b). State of the deployed second stent (c)