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©The Author(s) 2021.
World J Gastrointest Surg. Jun 27, 2021; 13(6): 537-547
Published online Jun 27, 2021. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v13.i6.537
Published online Jun 27, 2021. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v13.i6.537
Ref. | Design | Cases | Number of patients | Success rates | Complication rate |
Tyberg et al[15] | Retrospective study | Patients with biliary obstruction who failed conventional ERCP | 52 | Technical success rate: 96%. Clinical success rate: 77% | Adverse events: 10% |
Khashab et al[13] | Retrospective comparative cohort study | Patients who underwent EUS-BD or PTBD with distal malignant biliary obstruction after at least one failed ERCP attempt | 73 | Technical success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 86.4% vs 100%. Clinical success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 86.4% vs 92.2% | Adverse events: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 18.2% vs 39.2%. Re-intervention: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 15.7% vs 80.4% |
Sharaiha et al[10] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Patients who underwent EUS-BD or PTBD with biliary obstruction and failure of ERCP to obtain drainage | 483 | Technical success rate: OR 1.78 (P = 0.25). Clinical success rate: OR 0.45 (P = 0.66) in favor of EUS-BD | Adverse events: OR 0.23 (P = 0.02). Re-intervention: OR 0.13 (P = 0.77) in favor of EUS-BD |
Téllez-Ávila et al[14] | Retrospective comparative study | Patients who underwent EUS-BD or PTBD with biliary obstruction and had at least one previous failed ERCP attempt or difficulty in accessing the second portion of duodenum | 90 | Technical success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 90% vs 78% (P = 0.3). Clinical success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 96% vs 63% (P = 0.04) | Complications: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 6.6% vs 28% (P = 0.04). Length of hospital stay: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 6.5 d vs 12.5 d (P = 0.009) |
Poincloux et al[16] | Retrospective study | Patients with malignant and benign biliary obstruction with previous failed ERCP attempt who underwent EUS intra- or extra-hepatic approach with transluminal stenting or rendezvous procedure with trans-papillary stent placement | 101 | Technical success rate: 98%. Clinical success rate: 92.1% | Adverse event rate: 11.9%. Six procedure-related deaths |
Lesmana et al[12] | Retrospective study | Patients with advanced malignant biliary obstruction, who underwent EUS-BD after failed ERCP attempt | 38 | Technical success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 87.5%% vs 86.7% (P = 1.000). Clinical success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 62.5% vs 93.3% (P = 0.5) | Adverse events: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 1 patient vs 0 patient |
Han et al[17] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Patients with malignant distal biliary obstruction who underwent EUS-BD with transmural metal stenting or ERCP for primary palliative treatment | 756 | Technical success rate: EUS-BD vs ERCP: 94.8% vs 96.5%. Clinical success rate: EUS-BD vs ERCP: 93.8% vs 95.7% | Adverse event rate: EUS-BD vs ERCP: 16.3% vs 18.3% |
Moole et al[11] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Patients with inoperable malignant biliary strictures with a failed ERCP attempt, who underwent EUS-BD or PTBD | 528 | Success rate: EUS-BD vs PTBD (pooled OR): 3.06 | Risk difference for overall procedure-related complications in EUS-BD vs PTBD: -0.21. Relative risk for infectious complications and bile leak: EUS-BD vs PTBD: 0.25 vs 0.33 |
Artifon et al[18] | Prospective and randomized trial | Patients with unresectable malignant distal biliary obstruction (with history of failed standard ERCP) treated with EUS-guided choledochoduodenostomy (EUS-CDT) or surgical biliary bypass or hepaticojejunostomy (HJT) | 32 | Technical success rates: EUS-CDT vs HJT: 88% vs 94% (P = 0.598). Clinical success rates: EUS-CDT vs HJT: 71% vs 93% (P = 0.169) | Complication rates: EUS-CDT vs HJT: 21.42% vs 13.33% (P = 0.651). Median survival: EUS-CDT vs HJT: 82.36 d vs 82.27 d. 90-d mortality: EUS-CDT vs HJT: 42.9% vs 60% (P = 0.389) |
Ref. | Design | Cases | Number of patients | Technical success rate | Complication rate |
Farias et al[30] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Pancreatic pseudocysts | 342 | Risk difference: -0.09 (P = 0.07) | Drainage-related adverse events: risk difference: -0.02 (P = 0.48). General adverse events: risk difference: -0.05 (P = 0.13). |
Szakó et al[31] | Meta-analysis | Pseudocysts and walled-off necrosis | 842-896 | OR 0.59 (P = 0.022): lower clinical success of endoscopic approach | Mortality: OR 0.86 (P = 0.870): similar result. Post-operative length of hospital stay: -3.67 (P < 0.001) |
Varadarajulu et al[32] | Randomized trial | Pancreatic pseudocysts | 40 | Risk difference: -5% (P = 0.5) | Risk difference: -10% (P = 0.24). Median of hospital stay: -4 days (P < 0.001): shorter in endoscopic cytogastrostomy |
Ref. | Design | Cases | Number of patients | Technical success rate | Complication rate |
Khashab et al[35] | Retrospective study | Patients with malignant gastric outlet obstruction who underwent EUS-GE or surgical gastrojejunostomy (SGJ) | 93 | Technical success rate: EUS-GE vs SGJ: 87% vs 100% (P = 0.009). Clinical success rate: EUS-GE vs SGJ: 87% vs 90% (P = 0.8) | Recurrence rate: EUS-GE vs SGJ: 3% vs 14% (P = 0.2). Adverse event rate: EUS-GE vs SGJ: 16% vs 25% (P = 0.3). Length of stay: EUS-GE vs SGJ: 11.6 ± 6.6 d vs 12 ± 8.2 d (P = 0.35) |
Perez-Miranda et al[36] | Retrospective study | Patients with gastric outlet obstruction who underwent EUS-guided gastrojejunostomy (EUS-GJ) or laparoscopic gastrojejunostomy (Lap-GJ) | 54 | Technical success rate: EUS-GJ vs Lap-GJ: 88% vs 100% (P = 0.11). Clinical success rate: EUS-GJ vs Lap-GJ: 84% vs 90% (P = 0.11) | Adverse event rate: EUS-GJ vs Lap-GJ: 12% vs 41% (P = 0.0386) |
Jayaraj et al[37] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Patients with malignant gastric outlet obstruction who underwent EUS-GE and surgical GE | 171 | Technical success rate: pooled OR: 0.16 (P = 0.033). Clinical success rate: pooled OR: 0.98 (P = 0.984) | Overall adverse event rate: pooled OR: 0.35 (P = 0.014) |
Kouanda et al[38] | Retrospective study | Patients with gastric outlet obstruction who underwent EUS-GE or open gastrojejunostomy (OGJ) | 66 | Technical success rate: EUS-GE vs OGJ: 92.5% vs 100% (P = 0.15) | Recurrence of the symptoms: EUS-GE vs OGJ: 17.5% vs 19.2% (P = 0.34). Re-intervention rate: EUS-GE vs OGJ: 20% vs 11.5% (P = 0.78). Resumption of oral intake: EUS-GE vs OGJ: 1.3 d vs 4.7 d (P < 0.001). Length of hospital stay: EUS-GE vs OGJ: 5 d vs 14.5 d (P < 0.001). 30-d readmission rate: EUS-GE vs OGJ: 17.5% vs 24.1% (P = 0.37) |
- Citation: Lesmana CRA, Paramitha MS, Gani RA. Therapeutic interventional endoscopic ultrasound in pancreato-biliary disorders: Does it really replace the surgical/percutaneous approach? World J Gastrointest Surg 2021; 13(6): 537-547
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-9366/full/v13/i6/537.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4240/wjgs.v13.i6.537