Endoscopy 2010; 42(6): 496-502
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1244082
Case report/series
 
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Endoscopic ultrasound rendezvous for bile duct access using a transduodenal approach: cumulative experience at a single center. A case series

Y.  S.  Kim1 , K.  Gupta2 , S.  Mallery2 , R.  Li2 , T.  Kinney2 , M.  L.  Freeman3
  • 1Internal medicine, Gacheon Gil Medical Center of Gacheon Medical School, Incheon, Korea
  • 2Gastroenterology, Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
  • 3Gastroenterology, University of Minnesota Medical Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

submitted 21 September 2009

accepted after revision 3 February 2010

Publikationsdatum:
23. April 2010 (online)

Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-assisted biliary access is utilized when conventional endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) fails. We report a 10-year experience utilizing a transduodenal EUS rendezvous via a transpapillary route without dilation of the transduodenal tract, followed by immediate ERCP access. Patients included all EUS-guided rendezvous procedures for biliary access that were performed following ERCP failure. EUS-assisted bile duct puncture was performed via a transduodenal approach and a guide wire was advanced through the papilla without any dilation or bougienage of the tract; ERCP was performed immediately afterwards. EUS-assisted biliary rendezvous was attempted in 15 patients (mean age 66 ± 18.2 years; malignant = 10, benign = 5). Mean diameter of measured bile ducts was 14.3 ± 5.17 mm (range 4 – 23 mm). The reasons for initial ERCP failure were tumor infiltration or edema (n = 9), intradiverticular papilla (n = 2), pre-existing duodenal stent (n = 1), and anatomic anomalies (n = 3). Successful EUS-guided bile duct puncture and wire passage were achieved in all 15 patients (100 %), with drainage being successful in 12 / 15 (80 %). Failures occurred in three patients due to inability to traverse the biliary stricture (n = 2) or dissection of a choledochocele with the guide wire (n = 1); all were subsequently drained via percutaneous methods. Stents placed were metallic in eight patients and plastic in four. Complications consisted of moderate pancreatitis after a difficult ERCP attempt in one patient, and bacteremia after percutaneous biliary drainage in another. There were no instances of perforation, extraluminal air or fluid collections. EUS-assisted biliary drainage utilizing a transduodenal rendezvous approach demonstated a high success rate without any complications directly attributable to the EUS access. Advantages over percutaneous biliary and other methods of EUS biliary access include performance under the same anesthesia, and a very small-caliber needle puncture similar to EUS/fine-needle aspiration.

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M. L. FreemanMD 

Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition
University of Minnesota

MMC 36
420 Delaware Street
Minneapolis
MN 55455
USA

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eMail: freem020@umn.edu