Back to Search Start Over

Endoscopic Management of Recalcitrant Marginal Ulcers by Covering the Ulcer Bed

Authors :
Thomas H. Magnuson
Lea Fayad
Michael Schweitzer
Vikesh K. Singh
Anthony N. Kalloo
Saowanee Ngamruengphong
Mouen A. Khashab
Vivek Kumbhari
Sindhu Barola
Yen I. Chen
Christine Hill
Source :
Obesity surgery. 28(8)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Management options for marginal ulcers (MU) vary from medical therapy to revision surgery. Medical therapy is often ineffective and revision surgery is associated with a high morbidity and possible recurrence. To evaluate technical feasibility, efficacy, and safety of endoscopic management of MU by covering the ulcer bed using oversewing and/or deploying a fully covered self-expandable metallic stent (FCSEMS). Medical records of consecutive patients who underwent endoscopic suturing and/or FCSEMS deployment for recalcitrant MU between August 2016 and June 2017 at a single academic center were reviewed. Recalcitrant MU was defined as an ulcer that persists after 6 to 8 weeks despite maximal medical therapy (open capsule PPI, 40 mg bid as well as sucralfate qid), cessation of smoking and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and Helicobacter pylori eradication. Eleven patients (age range 31–60; all females) with mean BMI of 27.72 ± 5.93 kg/m2 underwent endoscopic suturing and/or stent deployment for recalcitrant MU with abdominal pain at a median of 50 months (range 3–120) post-Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB). Seven patients were managed by oversewing, two were managed by FCSEMS, and two patients required both. Technical success was 100%. All patients reported resolution of abdominal pain at 1 week. Surveillance endoscopy performed in 10/11 (90.9%) patients at 8 weeks revealed complete ulcer healing in 9/10 (90%). No adverse events were reported. Endoscopic management is an effective and safe method to treat MU and should be considered an alternative to surgical revision. It appears effective for perforated and recalcitrant MU.

Details

ISSN :
17080428
Volume :
28
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obesity surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....44d8e8d7b34bbdebaeb63e9c6fbf5c6c