Endoscopic Drainage of 450% of Liver in Malignant Hilar Biliary Obstruction Using Metallic or Fenestrated Plastic Stents

Tossapol Kerdsirichairat, Mustafa A. Arain, Rajeev Attam, Brooke Glessing, Yan Bakman, Stuart K. Amateau, Martin L. Freeman

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21 Scopus citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Endoscopic drainage of complex hilar tumors has generally resulted in poor outcomes. Drainage of 450% of liver volume has been proposed as optimal, but not evaluated using long multifenestrated plastic stents (MFPS) or self-expanding metal stents (SEMS). We evaluated outcomes of endoscopic drainage of malignant hilar strictures using optimal strategy and stents, and determined factors associated with stent patency, survival, and complications. METHODS: Cross-sectional study was conducted at an academic center over 5 years. MFPS (10 French or 8.5 French) or open-cell SEMS were used for palliation of unresectable malignant hilar strictures, with imaging-targeted drainage of as many sectors as needed to drain 450% of viable liver volume. Risk factors were evaluated using regression analysis. The cumulative risk was assessed using Kaplan–Meier analysis. RESULTS: 77 patients with malignant hilar biliary strictures (median Bismuth IV) underwent targeted stenting (41 MFPS and 36 SEMS). Comparing MFPS vs. SEMS, technical success (95.1 vs. 97.2%, P = 0.64), clinical success (75.6 vs. 83.3%, P = 0.40), frequency of multiple stents (23/41 vs. 25/36, P = 0.19), survival and adverse events were similar, but stent patency was significantly shorter (Po0.0001). Factors associated with survival were Karnofsky score and serum bilirubin level at presentation. Outcomes were independent of Bismuth class with acceptable results in Bismuth III and IV. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopic biliary drainage with MFPS or open-cell SEMS targeting 450% of viable liver resulted in effective palliation in patients with complex malignant hilar biliary strictures. Patency was shorter in the MFPS group, but similar survival and complications were found when comparing MFPS and SEMS group.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberA617
JournalClinical and translational gastroenterology
Volume8
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2017

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© 2017 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.

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