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Endoscopic treatment of biliopancreatic pathology in patients with Whipple’s pancreaticoduodenectomy surgical variants: Lessons learned from single-balloon enteroscopy-assisted ERCP |
Rodrigo Garces-Duran, Laurent Monino, Pierre H Deprez, Hubert Piessevaux, Tom G Moreels ∗ |
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Universitécatholique de Louvain, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Avenue Hippocrates 10, 1200 Brussels, Belgium
∗Corresponding author.
E-mail address: tom.moreels@saintluc.uclouvain.be (T.G. Moreels). |
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Abstract Background: Endoscopic treatment of biliopancreatic pathology is challenging due to surgically altered anatomy after Whipple’s pancreaticoduodenectomy. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility and safety of single-balloon enteroscopy-assisted endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (SBE-ERCP) to treat biliopancreatic pathology in patients with Whipple’s pancreaticoduodenectomy surgical variants.
Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 106 SBE-ERCP procedures in 46 patients with Whipple’s variants. Technical and clinical success rates and adverse events were evaluated.
Results: Biliary SBE-ERCP was performed in 34 patients and pancreatic SBE-ERCP in 17, including 5 with both indications. From a total of 106 SBE-ERCP procedures, 76 were biliary indication with technical suc- cess rate of 68/76 (90%) procedures and clinical success rate of 30/34 (88%) patients. Mild adverse event rate was 8/76 (11%), without serious adverse events. From a total of 106 SBE-ERCP procedures, 30 were pancreatic indication with technical success rate of 24/30 (80%) procedures ( P = 0.194 vs. biliary SBE- ERCP) and clinical success rate of 11/17 (65%) patients ( P = 0.016 vs. biliary SBE-ERCP). Mild adverse event rate was 6/30 (20%) ( P = 0.194 vs. biliary SBE-ERCP), without serious adverse events. After SBE-ERCP failure, endoscopic ultrasound-guided drainage, percutaneous drainage and redo surgery were alternative therapeutic options.
Conclusions: Biliopancreatic pathology after Whipple’s pancreaticoduodenectomy variants can be treated using SBE-ERCP without serious adverse events. Technical and clinical success rates are high for biliary indications, whereas clinical success rate of pancreatic indications is significantly lower. SBE-ERCP can be considered as first-line treatment option in this patient group with surgically altered anatomy.
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