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Endoscopy management of sleeve gastrectomy stenosis: what we learned from 202 consecutive patients.

Authors :
D'Alessandro, Alessandra
Dumont, Jean-Loup
Dagher, Ibrahim
Zito, Francesco
Galasso, Giovanni
Tranchart, Hadrien
Cereatti, Fabrizio
Catheline, Jean-Marc
Pourcher, Guillaume
Rebibo, Lionel
Calabrese, Daniela
Msika, Simon
Rotkopf, Hugo
Tuszynski, Thierry
Pacini, Filippo
Arienzo, Roberto
D'Alessandro, Antonio
Torcivia, Adriana
Genser, Laurent
Arapis, Konstantinos
Source :
Surgery for Obesity & Related Diseases; Mar2023, Vol. 19 Issue 3, p231-237, 7p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Gastric sleeve stenosis (GSS) is described in 1%–4% of patients. To evaluate the role of endoscopy in the management of stenosis after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy using a standardized approach according to the characteristic of stenosis. Retrospective, observational, single-center study on patients referred from several bariatric surgery departments to an endoscopic referral center. We enrolled 202 patients. All patients underwent endoscopy in a fluoroscopy setting, and a systematic classification of the type, site, and length of the GSS was performed. According to the characteristics of the stenosis, patients underwent pneumatic dilatation or placement of a self-expandable metal stent or a lumen-apposed metal stent. Failure of endoscopic treatment was considered an indication for redo surgery, whereas patients with partial or complete response were followed up for 2 years. In the event of a recurrence, a different endoscopic approach was used. We found inflammatory strictures in 4.5% of patients, pure narrowing in 11%, and functional stenosis in 84.5%. Stenosis was in the upper tract of the stomach in 53 patients, whereas medium and distal stenosis was detected in 138 and 11 patients, respectively, and short stenosis in 194 patients. A total of 126 patients underwent pneumatic dilatation, 8 self-expandable metal stent placement, 64 lumen-apposed metal stent positioning, and 36 combined therapy. The overall rate of endoscopy success was 69%. GSS should be considered to be a chronic disease, and the endoscopic approach seems to be the most successful treatment, with a prolonged positive outcome of 69%. Characteristics of the stenosis should guide the most suitable endoscopic approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15507289
Volume :
19
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Surgery for Obesity & Related Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162090720
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soard.2022.09.015