A 25-year-old man with a history of deceased-donor liver transplantation using a right lobe graft with Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy was referred for endoscopic management of cholangitis due to anastomotic strictures [1] ([Fig. 1]). The patient developed postoperative bile leakage and disconnection of the choledochojejunostomy anastomosis. He underwent percutaneous transhepatic placement of catheters for the bile ducts in segments 5, 6, and 7 (B5 – 7). Re-canalization was achieved by percutaneous procedures for B5 and B6, whereas a complete disconnection between B7 and the jejunum was not amenable to the percutaneous approach or double-balloon endoscopy. Therefore, we decided to perform endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided drainage to re-anastomose B7 with the jejunum.
Fig. 1 Fluoroscopic image suggesting a complete disconnection between the jejunum and the bile duct at segment 7 (arrows) in a patient with a history of Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy.
We inserted an echoendoscope (EG580UT; Fujifilm Corp., Tokyo, Japan) through a pre-existing jejunal stoma, after dilating the fistula with a 20-mm balloon catheter. With the help of contrast injection through the biliary catheter, B7 was punctured using a 19-gauge needle and a 0.025-inch guidewire was passed through the fistula of a percutaneous catheter. After inserting a balloon catheter over the guidewire with external traction, we dilated the puncture site and deployed a 10-Fr percutaneous catheter into the jejunum across B7 ([Fig. 2]).
Fig. 2 Radiographic images during endoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary drainage showing: a a guidewire passed through the fistula of a percutaneous catheter; b balloon dilation of the puncture site.
In the following session, we inserted a forward-viewing endoscope (GIF-2T240; Olympus Medical, Tokyo, Japan) through the stoma and replaced each of the percutaneous catheters with fully-covered self-expandable metal stents (8 mm × 4 cm; BONASTENT M-Intraductal; Sewoon Medical Co., Ltd., Chungcheongnam-do, South Korea) ([Fig. 3]) [2]. The metal stents were subsequently removed endoscopically 3 months later, with no recurrence of cholangitis ([Fig. 4]).
Fig. 3 Radiographic image showing three fully-covered self-expandable metal stents placed endoscopically into the three biliary branches.
Fig. 4 Endoscopic image suggesting that the choledochojejunostomy anastomosis was widely open after removal of the self-expandable metal stents.
EUS-guided biliary drainage for a complicated anastomotic disconnection was feasible through a jejunal stoma ([Video 1]). Given recent advances in EUS-guided pancreatobiliary interventions [3]
[4], the use of a jejunal stoma as a port for endoscopic biliary access could further expand this developing frontier of non-surgical management for postoperative complications [5].
Video 1 Endoscopic ultrasound-guided choledochojejunostomy for an anastomotic disconnection in a patient with a history of Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy. Three self-expandable metal stents are inserted. After their removal 3 months later, the choledochojejunostomy anastomosis is left widely open.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_TTT_1AR_2AG
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