par Pérez-Cuadrado-Robles, Enrique;Bronswijk, Michiel;Prat, Frédéric;Barthet, Marc MB;Palazzo, Maxime;Arcidiacono, Paolo;Schaefer, Marion;Devière, Jacques
;Van Wanrooij, Roy R.L.J.;Tarantino, Ilaria;Donatelli, Gianfranco;Camus, Marine;Sanchez-Yague, Andres;Pham, Khanh Do Cong;Gonzalez, Jean Michel;Anderloni, Andrea;Vila, Juan Jose;Jezequel, Julien;Larghi, Alberto;Jais, Bénédicte;Vazquez-Sequeiros, Enrique;Deprez, Pierre;Van Der Merwe, Schalk Willem;Cellier, Christophe;Rahmi, Gabriel
Référence Digestive endoscopy
Publication Publié, 2022

Référence Digestive endoscopy
Publication Publié, 2022
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : | Objectives: Endoscopic ultrasound-guided digestive anastomosis (EUS-A) is a new alternative under evaluation in patients presenting with afferent limb syndrome (ALS) after Whipple surgery. The aim of the present study is to analyze the safety and effectiveness of EUS-A in ALS. Methods: This is an observational multicenter study. All patients ≥18 years old with previous Whipple surgery presenting with ALS who underwent an EUS-A using a lumen-apposing metal stent (LAMS) between 2015 and 2021 were included. The primary outcome was clinical success, defined as resolution of the ALS or ALS-related cholangitis. Furthermore, technical success, adverse event rate, and mortality were evaluated. Results: Forty-five patients (mean age: 65.5 ± 10.2 years; 44.4% male) were included. The most common underlying disease was pancreatic cancer (68.9%). EUS-A was performed at a median of 6 weeks after local tumor recurrence. The most common approach used was the direct/freehand technique (66.7%). Technical success was achieved in 95.6%, with no differences between large (≥15 mm) and small LAMS (97.4% vs. 100%, P = 0.664). Clinical success was retained in 91.1% of patients. A complementary treatment by dilation of the stent followed by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography through the LAMS was performed in three cases (6.7%). There were six recurrent episodes of cholangitis (14.6%) and two procedure-related adverse events (4.4%) after a median follow-up of 4 months. Twenty-six patients (57.8%) died during the follow-up due to disease progression. Conclusion: EUS-A is a safe and effective technique in the treatment of malignant ALS, achieving high clinical success with an acceptable recurrence rate. |