| Literature DB >> 34996894 |
Jean-Michel Gonzalez1, Sohaib Ouazzani2, Laurent Monino2, Laura Beyer-Berjot3,4, Stephane Berdah3,4, Nicolas Cauche5, Cecilia Delattre5, Joyce A Peetermans6, Peter Dayton6, Ornela Gjata6, Darren Curran6, Marc Barthet2.
Abstract
We conducted a pilot study of a potential endoscopic alternative to bariatric surgery. We developed a Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES) gastric bypass with controlled bypass limb length using four new devices including a dedicated lumen-apposing metal stent (GJ-LAMS) and pyloric duodenal exclusion device (DED). We evaluated procedural technical success, weight change from baseline, and adverse events in growing Landrace/Large-White pigs through 38 weeks after GJ-LAMS placement. Six pigs (age 2.5 months, mean baseline weight 26.1 ± 2.7 kg) had initial GJ-LAMS placement with controlled bypass limb length, followed by DED placement at 2 weeks. Technical success was 100%. GJ-LAMS migrated in 3 of 6, and DED migrated in 3 of 5 surviving pigs after mucosal abrasion. One pig died by Day 94. At 38 weeks, necropsy showed 100-240 cm limb length except for one at 760 cm. Weight gain was significantly lower in the pigs that underwent endoscopic bypass procedures compared to expected weight for age. This first survival study of a fully endoscopic controlled bypass length gastrojejunostomy with duodenal exclusion in a growing porcine model showed high technical success but significant adverse events. Future studies will include procedural and device optimizations and comparison to a control group.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34996894 PMCID: PMC8741923 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-02921-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Final devices used in the fully endoscopic jejunal bypass with duodenal exclusion procedure. (A) Enteral Beacon. (B) Atraumatic Grasper. (C) GJ-LAMS. (D) DED (final size: 34 mm long with 34-mm diameter flange).
Figure 2Planned GJ-LAMS and DED placement and removal. GJ-LAMS gastrojejunal lumen-apposing metal stent, NOTES natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery, DED duodenal exclusion device.
Animal and procedural measurements, endoscopic and necropsy findings.
| Measurement | Mean ± SD or percent (n/N) |
|---|---|
| Placement time (min)a | |
| GJ-LAMS (including beacon time and stent placement time) | 35.5 ± 9.2 |
| DED (Week 2) | 4.5 ± 1.9 |
| DED (Week 11) | 5.5 ± 1.2 |
| Technical successa | |
| GJA using GJ-LAMS (Week 0–1) | 100% |
| Duodenal exclusion by pyloric closure using DED (Weeks 2 and 11) | 100% |
| Baseline age (months) | 2.5 |
| Weight (kg) | |
| Initial for 7 pigs | 26.1 ± 2.7 |
| Initial for 5 pigs that survived to Week 38a | 26.5 ± 1.6 |
| Final (38 weeks past GJ, 13 weeks past most recent pyloric closure)a | 45.6 ± 12.3 (range 32.5, 60.8) |
| Weight change from baseline to 38 weeksa | 19.1 ± 11.3 (range 6.3, 31.7) |
| Device-related adverse eventsa | |
| Total number of GJ-LAMS migrations during study | 4 |
| Mean number of GJ-LAMS migrations per pig | 0.7 ± 0.8 |
| Total number of DED migrations | 10 |
| Mean number of DED migrations | |
| Overall | 1.7 ± 0.8 (6) |
| After mucosal abrasion was initiateda | 0.8 ± 0.8 (5) |
| Other adverse events | |
| Transient diarrhea | 42.9% (3/7) |
| Asymptomatic partial duodenal stenosis | 28.6% (2/7) |
| Small wall abscesses in the muscularis externaa | 40% (2/5) |
| Death (without evidence of device failure on necropsy) | 28.6% (2/7) |
| Mucosa appears normal | |
| Esophagus | 100.0% (5/5) |
| Gastric | 100.0% (5/5) |
| Gastric stasis | |
| None | 20% (1/5) |
| Slight | 40% (2/5) |
| Much | 40% (2/5) |
| GJA | |
| Mean diameter of GJA stoma (mm) | 14.2 ± 3.9 (range 10.0, 20.0) |
| Pylorus | |
| Mean diameter of pyloric orifice (mm) | 7.8 ± 4.5 (range 4.0, 14.0) |
GJ gastrojejunal, GJA gastrojejunal anastomosis, DED duodenal exclusion device.
aNot including Pig 1 or original pig 4 (died). Baseline for pigs 1–3 and 6 was Day 0; baseline for pigs 4 and 5 was Day 7/Week 1.
Figure 3Steps in the fully endoscopic jejunal bypass with duodenal exclusion procedure. (A) View of jejunal wall though the recently deployed GJ-LAMS. (B) Atraumatic removal of GJ-LAMS with grasper after 14 weeks of GJ-LAMS indwell. (C) View of jejunal wall through mature GJA after removal of the GJ-LAMS at the end of 13 weeks of indwell. (D) Mucosal abrasion before DED placement at Week 11. (E) DED immediately after deployment in the pylorus at Week 1. (F) DED shortly before atraumatic removal after 22 weeks of indwell. Tissue ingrowth is evident.
Figure 4Placement, removal and migration of GJ-LAMS and DED in domestic pigs.
Figure 5Pylorus, GJA and jejunal limb explanted upon necropsy at 38 weeks.
Figure 6Domestic pig growth curves (A) for study animals and (B) compared to normal references[14,15].