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EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) is emerging as a valuable treatment for acute cholecystitis (AC) in patients unfit for surgery. When lumen-apposing metal stents are used, large-caliber access to the gallbladder allows for subsequent direct peroral endoscopic cholecysto...

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Autores principales: Vanella, Giuseppe, Dell’Anna, Giuseppe, Bronswijk, Michiel, Capurso, Gabriele, Reni, Michele, Falconi, Massimo, Van der Merwe, Schalk, Arcidiacono, Paolo Giorgio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8917318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35287363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vgie.2021.10.002
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author Vanella, Giuseppe
Dell’Anna, Giuseppe
Bronswijk, Michiel
Capurso, Gabriele
Reni, Michele
Falconi, Massimo
Van der Merwe, Schalk
Arcidiacono, Paolo Giorgio
author_facet Vanella, Giuseppe
Dell’Anna, Giuseppe
Bronswijk, Michiel
Capurso, Gabriele
Reni, Michele
Falconi, Massimo
Van der Merwe, Schalk
Arcidiacono, Paolo Giorgio
author_sort Vanella, Giuseppe
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) is emerging as a valuable treatment for acute cholecystitis (AC) in patients unfit for surgery. When lumen-apposing metal stents are used, large-caliber access to the gallbladder allows for subsequent direct peroral endoscopic cholecystoscopy (POEC) and eventual cholecystolithotomy (CL), offering a potentially “curative” solution for frailer patients. The aim of this series was to evaluate the outcome of these procedures in oncologic patients experiencing AC, with a specific focus on chemotherapy continuity. METHODS: A prospective registry of all consecutive therapeutic EUS procedures performed in the San Raffaele Institute between December 2020 and April 2021 was searched for EUS-GBD + POEC-CL performed in chemotherapy candidates. Clinical and technical variables were prospectively registered, as were days of chemotherapy delay and postprocedural outcomes. RESULTS: Three consecutive patients with a diagnosis of a malignancy (2 pancreatic cancers and 1 severe myeloproliferative disease with skeletal lesions) experienced AC and were primarily treated by EUS-GBD. After 4 weeks, they were systematically scheduled for POEC-CL and lumen-apposing metal stent exchange for a double-pigtail plastic stent. All procedures and revisions were successful, with rapid clinical improvement. All gallbladders were cleared of food debris and stones between 3 and 15 mm using grasping forceps, polypectomy snares, Dormia baskets, and mechanical lithotripsy. One mild adverse event without any clinical consequence was registered during POEC-CL. Revisions did not interfere with the chemotherapy schedule. Technical variables (eg, gastric vs duodenal drainage or need for coaxial double-pigtail plastic stent) are discussed. CONCLUSIONS: EUS-GBD and subsequent POEC-CL allows a highly effective and minimally invasive solution for AC. These initial experiences promote further evaluation of this approach for all those individuals in whom surgical interventions are undesirable, such as oncologic patients whose prognosis depends on chemotherapy continuity, although further prospective confirmation in this setting should be pursued.
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spelling pubmed-89173182022-03-13 EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients? Vanella, Giuseppe Dell’Anna, Giuseppe Bronswijk, Michiel Capurso, Gabriele Reni, Michele Falconi, Massimo Van der Merwe, Schalk Arcidiacono, Paolo Giorgio VideoGIE Video Case Series BACKGROUND AND AIMS: EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) is emerging as a valuable treatment for acute cholecystitis (AC) in patients unfit for surgery. When lumen-apposing metal stents are used, large-caliber access to the gallbladder allows for subsequent direct peroral endoscopic cholecystoscopy (POEC) and eventual cholecystolithotomy (CL), offering a potentially “curative” solution for frailer patients. The aim of this series was to evaluate the outcome of these procedures in oncologic patients experiencing AC, with a specific focus on chemotherapy continuity. METHODS: A prospective registry of all consecutive therapeutic EUS procedures performed in the San Raffaele Institute between December 2020 and April 2021 was searched for EUS-GBD + POEC-CL performed in chemotherapy candidates. Clinical and technical variables were prospectively registered, as were days of chemotherapy delay and postprocedural outcomes. RESULTS: Three consecutive patients with a diagnosis of a malignancy (2 pancreatic cancers and 1 severe myeloproliferative disease with skeletal lesions) experienced AC and were primarily treated by EUS-GBD. After 4 weeks, they were systematically scheduled for POEC-CL and lumen-apposing metal stent exchange for a double-pigtail plastic stent. All procedures and revisions were successful, with rapid clinical improvement. All gallbladders were cleared of food debris and stones between 3 and 15 mm using grasping forceps, polypectomy snares, Dormia baskets, and mechanical lithotripsy. One mild adverse event without any clinical consequence was registered during POEC-CL. Revisions did not interfere with the chemotherapy schedule. Technical variables (eg, gastric vs duodenal drainage or need for coaxial double-pigtail plastic stent) are discussed. CONCLUSIONS: EUS-GBD and subsequent POEC-CL allows a highly effective and minimally invasive solution for AC. These initial experiences promote further evaluation of this approach for all those individuals in whom surgical interventions are undesirable, such as oncologic patients whose prognosis depends on chemotherapy continuity, although further prospective confirmation in this setting should be pursued. Elsevier 2021-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8917318/ /pubmed/35287363 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vgie.2021.10.002 Text en © 2022 American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Video Case Series
Vanella, Giuseppe
Dell’Anna, Giuseppe
Bronswijk, Michiel
Capurso, Gabriele
Reni, Michele
Falconi, Massimo
Van der Merwe, Schalk
Arcidiacono, Paolo Giorgio
EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
title EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
title_full EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
title_fullStr EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
title_full_unstemmed EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
title_short EUS-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: A tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
title_sort eus-guided gallbladder drainage and subsequent peroral endoscopic cholecystolithotomy: a tool to reduce chemotherapy discontinuation in neoplastic patients?
topic Video Case Series
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8917318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35287363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vgie.2021.10.002
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