| Literature DB >> 36118636 |
Alberto Tringali1, Deborah Costa1, Matteo Rota2, Douglas G Adler3, Guido Costamagna4.
Abstract
Background and study aims Placement of a covered (C)-self-expandable metal stent (SEMS) has been recently investigated as an alternative endoscopic treatment for main pancreatic duct stricture (MPDS) in chronic pancreatitis. Our aim was to carry out a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies quantifying efficacy and safety of C-SEMSs in the management of MPDS. Methods A multiple database search was performed, including MEDLINE, Embase and Cochrane Library, from January 2000 to September 2020, to identify studies reporting the efficacy and safety of C-SEMSs in patients with MPDS. Stricture and pain resolution were investigated. Other outcomes included technical success, stent migration, stricture recurrence and need for repeated stent placement. Pancreatitis, severe abdominal pain requiring stent removal and de-novo stricture were recorded as complications. Results Nineteen studies were identified, which included a total of 300 patients. C-SEMSs showed a pooled stricture resolution rate of 91 % [95 % confidence interval (CI), 85 %-96 %] and a pooled pain resolution rate of 92 % (95 % CI, 85 %-98 %). The pooled proportion for stricture recurrence was equal to 6 % (95 % CI, 1 %-14 %), while stent migration occurred in 33 of 300 patients, the pooled proportion being 7 % (95 % CI 1 %-15 %). The pooled mean stent duration was 133 days (95 % CI, 100-166 days). The most common complication was pancreatitis (3 %, 95 % CI 0 %-8 %), while de-novo stricture pooled proportion was 2 % (95 % CI, 0 %-5 %). Conclusions C-SEMSs are effective and safe in the treatment of MPDS. However, there is a significant need for further high-quality, well-designed studies to produce evidence-based data on short and long-term efficacy, safety, costs of C-SEMSs, and also optimal stent duration. 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 commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36118636 PMCID: PMC9473849 DOI: 10.1055/a-1880-7430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endosc Int Open ISSN: 2196-9736
Characteristics of studies included in the meta-analysis.
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Okushima et al. 2005
| Japan | Retrospective |
Diamond (PC-SEMSs), 8–10 mm
| 3 | 51 (39–59) | 3/0 | 2/3 | 24 (18–25) |
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Park et al. 2008
| South Korea | Prospective |
Niti D, 6–8 mm
| 13 | 49 (32–68) | 9/4 | 8/13 | 5 (2–10) |
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Sauer et al. 2008
| United States | Retrospective |
VIABIL, 8–10 mm
| 6 | 54 (42–64) | 4/2 | 4/6 | 3 (1–8) |
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Moon et al. 2010
| South Korea | Prospective |
Niti-S Bumpy, 6–10 mm
| 32 | 48 (17–73) | 27/5 | 27/32 | 5 (3–7) |
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Giacino et al. 2012
| France | Retrospective |
WallStent (PC–SEMS, 1 patient), WallFlex (9 patients), 8–10 mm
| 10 | 53 (31–84) | 8/2 | 6/10 | 20 (13–34) |
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Sangwaiya et al. 2015
| United Kingdom | Retrospective | FC-SEMSs, not otherwise specified | 8 | 58 (41–68) | 3/5 | 4/6 | 9 (2–15) |
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Matsubara et al. 2016
| Japan | Prospective |
Niti-S D/Bumpy, 8–10 mm
| 10 | 50 (36–71) | 6/4 | 8/13 | 35 (19–57) |
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Ogura et al. 2016
| Japan | Retrospective |
Niti-S biliary S, 6 mm
| 13 | 54 (36–81) | 6/7 | 19/32 | 8 (6–18) |
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Patel et al. 2017
| United States | Retrospective | FC-SEMSs, not otherwise specified | 20 | 43 (15–75) | 9/11 | NA | NA |
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Korpela et al. 2018
| Finland | Retrospective |
Niti-S Bumpy, Hanaro, VIABIL, 8–10 mm
| 17 | 58 (19–68) | 16/1 | 10/17 | 29 (8–80) |
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Oh et al. 2018
| South Korea | Retrospective |
Bonastent, 6 mm
| 18 |
43 (35–62)
| 7/11 | 7/18 |
47 (7–57)
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Traini et al. 2018
| Italy | Retrospective | Niti-S biliary, variable diameter and length | 5 | 57 (± 14 SD) | 4/1 | 3/5 | NA |
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Tringali et al. 2018
| Italy | Prospective |
Niti-S Bumpy, 6–8 mm
| 15 | 60 (19–85) | 10/5 | 4/15 | 39 (5–55) |
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Yamada et al. 2018
| Japan | Prospective |
Dumbbell, 8–10 mm
| 22 | 66 (15–80) | 17/5 | 20/22 | 14 (9–16) |
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Cho et al. 2019
| South Korea | Retrospective |
FC-SEMSs, not otherwise specified, 8–10 mm
| 23 | 48 (NA) | 21/2 | 23/23 |
17 (11–35)
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Jain et al. 2019
| India | Retrospective | FC-SEMSs, not otherwise specified | 23 | 42 (22–65) | 17/6 | NA |
42 (6–78)
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Sharaiha et al. 2019
| United States | Retrospective |
Wallflex, 8–10 mm
| 33 | 54 (18–87) | 25/8 | 19/33 | 14 (6–24) |
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Shen et al. 2019
| China | Retrospective | FC-SEMSs, not otherwise specified | 4 | NA | NA | NA | 33 (23–39) |
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Lee et al. 2020
| South Korea | Prospective |
Dumbbell, 8–10 mm
| 25 |
53 (46–56)
| 21/4 | 19/25 |
34 (25–56)
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IQR was reported.
Inclusion criteria for each study included in the meta-analysis.
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Okushima et al. 2005
| Stone recurrence after ESWL and/or endoscopic treatment 3–6 times. |
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Park et al. 2008
| Refractory strictures defined as stricture of the pancreatic duct during follow-up after previous placement of single or double plastic stents (10 F or double 7 F) with regular intervals of stent change for at least 12 months. |
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Sauer et al. 2008
| Refractory strictures defined as failure of conventional placement of a plastic stent in the PD to relieve pain. |
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Moon et al. 2010
| Recurrent painful stricture after initial stricture resolution or persistent stricture despite plastic stenting for at least 2 months. |
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Giacino et al. 2012
| Recurrent typical pain which required daily analgesics and at least one dominant pancreatic duct stricture at endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. Eight patients had undergone one or two plastic pancreatic stents (7–11.5 Fr) and biliary stents for 4–12 months. The other two patients proceeded directly to treatment with an FC-SEMS. |
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Sangwaiya et al. 2015
| Main pancreatic duct stricture due to chronic pancreatitis. 5 patients had prior placement of plastic stents and 3 had no prior endoprostheses. Stents were inserted through Santorini’s duct. |
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Matsubara et al. 2016
| Refractory strictures defined as recurrent pain or pancreatitis after plastic stent removal caused by unresolved stricture or requirement for continuous plastic stents placement for symptomatic unresolved stricture; previous placement of a single PS with regular intervals of stent exchange for at least 3 months. |
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Ogura et al. 2016
| Symptomatic chronic pancreatitis with abdominal pain and a main pancreatic head duct stricture. All 13 patients were native of pancreatic stenting. |
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Patel et al. 2017
| Refractory MPDS (no definition). |
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Korpela et al. 2018
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Refractory dominant stricture defined as a definite narrowing of the pancreatic duct creating obstruction to pancreatic flow, with persistence of contrast medium in the dilated duct of the body and tail for more than 5 minutes after stent removal (
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Oh et al. 2018
| Refractory strictures defined as presence of pain relapse or pancreatitis occurring within 6 months after plastic stent removal, which had been in place for at least 12 months. |
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Traini et al. 2018
| Strictures that persisted after repeated plastic stenting. |
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Tringali et al. 2018
| Persistent strictures defined as the persistence of the MPDS after initial treatment with pancreatic sphincterotomy and single plastic stent insertion. |
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Yamada et al. 2018
| Painful CP with MPDS and upstream ductal dilation (> 6 mm), prior deployment of a plastic stent for 6 months and symptomatic after stent deployment. |
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Cho et al. 2019
| Refractory MPDS (no definition). |
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Jain et al. 2019
| Refractory MPDS (no definition). |
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Sharaiha et al. 2019
| Refractory strictures defined as refractory pain despite prior treatment with a conventional therapy that included at least three balloon dilations, repeat plastic stent placements with upsizing of the stents, or stone lithotripsy. |
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Shen et al. 2019
| Refractory strictures defined as MPDS refractory to conventional pancreatic plastic stent implantation. |
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Lee et al. 2020
| Refractory strictures defined as persistence of the MPDS after initial treatment with pancreatic sphincterotomy and single plastic stent insertion (recurrence of a painful stricture within 6 months or stricture persistence after plastic stent removal). |
Fig. 1Forest plots showing the results of a conventional and cumulative meta-analysis of the stricture resolution and b pain relief rate of C-SEMSs for the treatment of MPDS. The pooled odds ratio (OR) is represented through a diamond and its tips represents the 95 % confidence interval (CI), whereas the prediction interval is represented through a dashed thin line.
Results of stratified analyses on stricture resolution.
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| .22 | |||
Before 2018 | 9 | 0.93 (0.83–1.00) | 55 %, .02 | |
After 2018 | 10 | 0.89 (0.80–0.96) | 54 %, .02 | |
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| .22 | |||
America | 3 | 0.86 (0.68–0.98) | 51 %, .13 | |
Asia | 11 | 0.95 (0.89–0.99) | 44 %, .06 | |
Europe | 5 | 0.82 (0.61–0.97) | 62 %, .03 | |
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| .02 | |||
Retrospective | 13 | 0.85 (0.78–0.92) | 29 %, .16 | |
Prospective | 6 | 0.98 (0.91–1.00) | 53 %, .06 | |
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| .07 | |||
Original article | 13 | 0.94 (0.87–0.99) | 52 %, .01 | |
Congress abstract | 6 | 0.83 (0.71–0.93) | 25 %, .25 | |
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| .61 | |||
6–8 | 2 | 0.93 (0.87–0.98) | 0 %, .36 | |
8–10 | 8 | 0.83 (0.71–0.93) | 56 %, .03 | |
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| .82 | |||
≤ 3 | 6 | 0.92 (0.75–1.00) | 63 %, .02 | |
> 3 | 10 | 0.93 (0.86–0.98) | 39 %, .10 | |
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| .56 | |||
≤ 1 | 5 | 0.94 (0.78–1.00) | 65 %, .02 | |
> 1 | 12 | 0.92 (0.86–0.97) | 32 %, .14 |
The sum of number of studies does not add up to the total since some studies did not report such information.
Fig. 2Forest plots showing a stricture recurrence of C-SEMSs for the treatment of MPDS and b secondary endpoints. The pooled odds ratio (OR) is represented through a diamond and its tips represents the 95 % confidence interval (CI), whereas the prediction interval is represented through a dashed thin line.
Fig. 3Risk of bias evaluation of the included studies according to the Risk of Bias in Non-Randomised Studies of Interventions (ROBINS-I) tool. a Study-specific risk of bias.