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Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience

Background and aims: Post-ERCP complications increase with repeated attempts at cannulation. We evaluated several advanced biliary cannulation techniques applied when the standard approach fails. Methods: In total, 1873 consecutive patients underwent ERCP at our institution during the period 2010 – ...

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Autores principales: Huang, Connie, Kung, Jonathan, Liu, Yong, Tse, Audrey, Datta, Anuj, Singh, Inder, Eysselein, Viktor E., Reicher, Sofiya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: © Georg Thieme Verlag KG 2016
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5063748/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27747287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-115407
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author Huang, Connie
Kung, Jonathan
Liu, Yong
Tse, Audrey
Datta, Anuj
Singh, Inder
Eysselein, Viktor E.
Reicher, Sofiya
author_facet Huang, Connie
Kung, Jonathan
Liu, Yong
Tse, Audrey
Datta, Anuj
Singh, Inder
Eysselein, Viktor E.
Reicher, Sofiya
author_sort Huang, Connie
collection PubMed
description Background and aims: Post-ERCP complications increase with repeated attempts at cannulation. We evaluated several advanced biliary cannulation techniques applied when the standard approach fails. Methods: In total, 1873 consecutive patients underwent ERCP at our institution during the period 2010 – 2014. Guidewire-assisted (GA) cannulation with no contrast injection until deep biliary cannulation was considered the standard technique. Advanced techniques used were double wire-guided (DWG) cannulation, transpancreatic papillary septotomy (TPS), and needle-knife sphincterotomy (NKS). When GA cannulation failed, DWG cannulation was usually attempted first if the pancreatic duct (PD) wire was in place; if that failed, TPS or NKS was performed. Alternatively, TPS or NKS were performed alone. A prophylactic pancreatic stent was placed with repeated PD cannulation or PD contrast injection. During the last 2 years of review, indomethacin suppositories were given post-procedure to all patients who underwent advanced techniques. Results: The overall biliary cannulation success rate was 97 % (1823/1873). Advanced techniques were used in 12 % of ERCPs (230/1873), with 87 % (200/230) success rate. DWG was used alone or in combination with other techniques in 58 % (134/230) of advanced cases, with 68 % (91/134) success rate. Biliary cannulation was achieved in 96 % (91/95) of procedures when DWG was used alone, 76 % (26/34) with TPS alone, 80 % (37/46) for NKS alone, and 84 % (46/55) with multiple techniques. The overall rate of post-ERCP pancreatitis was 0.4 %, with all patients treated conservatively. Conclusion: In our experience at an urban tertiary care center, use of advanced techniques in difficult ERCP improved the overall success rate of biliary cannulation after standard technique failure without a significant increase in complication rate.
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spelling pubmed-50637482016-10-14 Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience Huang, Connie Kung, Jonathan Liu, Yong Tse, Audrey Datta, Anuj Singh, Inder Eysselein, Viktor E. Reicher, Sofiya Endosc Int Open Background and aims: Post-ERCP complications increase with repeated attempts at cannulation. We evaluated several advanced biliary cannulation techniques applied when the standard approach fails. Methods: In total, 1873 consecutive patients underwent ERCP at our institution during the period 2010 – 2014. Guidewire-assisted (GA) cannulation with no contrast injection until deep biliary cannulation was considered the standard technique. Advanced techniques used were double wire-guided (DWG) cannulation, transpancreatic papillary septotomy (TPS), and needle-knife sphincterotomy (NKS). When GA cannulation failed, DWG cannulation was usually attempted first if the pancreatic duct (PD) wire was in place; if that failed, TPS or NKS was performed. Alternatively, TPS or NKS were performed alone. A prophylactic pancreatic stent was placed with repeated PD cannulation or PD contrast injection. During the last 2 years of review, indomethacin suppositories were given post-procedure to all patients who underwent advanced techniques. Results: The overall biliary cannulation success rate was 97 % (1823/1873). Advanced techniques were used in 12 % of ERCPs (230/1873), with 87 % (200/230) success rate. DWG was used alone or in combination with other techniques in 58 % (134/230) of advanced cases, with 68 % (91/134) success rate. Biliary cannulation was achieved in 96 % (91/95) of procedures when DWG was used alone, 76 % (26/34) with TPS alone, 80 % (37/46) for NKS alone, and 84 % (46/55) with multiple techniques. The overall rate of post-ERCP pancreatitis was 0.4 %, with all patients treated conservatively. Conclusion: In our experience at an urban tertiary care center, use of advanced techniques in difficult ERCP improved the overall success rate of biliary cannulation after standard technique failure without a significant increase in complication rate. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG 2016-10 2016-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5063748/ /pubmed/27747287 http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-115407 Text en © Thieme Medical Publishers
spellingShingle Huang, Connie
Kung, Jonathan
Liu, Yong
Tse, Audrey
Datta, Anuj
Singh, Inder
Eysselein, Viktor E.
Reicher, Sofiya
Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience
title Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience
title_full Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience
title_fullStr Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience
title_full_unstemmed Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience
title_short Use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ERCP: 4-year experience
title_sort use of double wire-guided technique and transpancreatic papillary septotomy in difficult ercp: 4-year experience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5063748/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27747287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-115407
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