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Endoscopic internal drainage for the management of leak, fistula, and collection after sleeve gastrectomy: our experience in 617 consecutive patients

Authors :
Andrea Spota
Daniela Calabrese
Laurent Genser
Jean-Marc Chevallier
Antoine Soprani
Panagiotis Lainas
Jean-Marc Catheline
Renaud Chiche
Jean-Loup Dumont
Federica Papini
Gianfranco Donatelli
Kostas Arapis
Luca Paolino
Denis Chosidow
Simon Msika
Carmelisa Dammaro
Roberto Arienzo
Stefano Granieri
Thierry Tuszynski
Bruto Randone
Guillaume Pourcher
Lionel Rebibo
Hadrien Tranchart
Nelson Trelles
Adriana Torcivia
Ibrahim Dagher
Jean-Pierre Marmuse
Andrea Lazzati
Jean-Luc Bouillot
Fabrizio Cereatti
Filippo Pacini
Donatelli, G.
Spota, A.
Cereatti, F.
Granieri, S.
Dagher, I.
Chiche, R.
Catheline, J. -M.
Pourcher, G.
Rebibo, L.
Calabrese, D.
Msika, S.
Dammaro, C.
Tranchart, H.
Lainas, P.
Tuszynski, T.
Pacini, F.
Arienzo, R.
Chevallier, J. -M.
Trelles, N.
Lazzati, A.
Paolino, L.
Papini, F.
Torcivia, A.
Genser, L.
Arapis, K.
Soprani, A.
Randone, B.
Chosidow, D.
Bouillot, J. -L.
Marmuse, J. -P.
Dumont, J. -L.
Source :
Surgery for obesity and related diseases : official journal of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery. 17(8)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Endoscopy plays a pivotal role in the management of adverse events (AE) following bariatric surgery. Leaks, fistulae, and post-operative collection after sleeve gastrectomy (SG) may occur in up to 10% of cases. Objectives To evaluate the efficacy and safety of endoscopic internal drainage (EID) for the management of leak, fistula, and collection following SG. Setting Retrospective, observational, single center study on patients referred from several bariatric surgery departments to an endoscopic referral center. Methods EID was used as first-line treatment for the management of leaks, fistulae, and collections. Leaks and fistulae were treated with double pigtail stent (DPS) deployment in order to guarantee internal drainage and second intention cavity obliteration. Collections were treated with endoscropic ultrasound (EUS)–guided deployment of DPS or lumen apposing metal stents. Results A total of 617 patients (83.3% female; mean age, 43.1 yr) were enrolled in the study for leak (n = 300, 48.6%), fistula (n = 285, 46.2%), and collection (n = 32, 5.2%). Median follow-up was 19.5 months. Overall clinical success was 84.7% whereas 15.3% of cases required revisional surgery after EID failure. Clinical success according to type of AE was 89.5%, 78.5%, and 90% for leak, fistula, and collection, respectively. A total of 10 of 547 (1.8%) presented a recurrence during follow-up. A total of 28 (4.5%) AE related to the endoscopic treatment occurred. At univariate logistic regression predictors of failure were: fistula (OR 2.012), combined endoscopic approach (OR 2.319), need for emergency surgery (OR 1.755), and previous endoscopic treatment (OR 4.818). Conclusion Early EID for the management of leak, fistula, and post-operative collection after SG seems a safe and effective first-line approach with good long-term results.

Details

ISSN :
18787533
Volume :
17
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgery for obesity and related diseases : official journal of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3734a5c6114bc28e3a30f9baf32bf0cc