4.5 Article

Efficacy and safety of combined endoscopic cyanoacrylate injection and balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous occlusion (BRTOcc) of gastrorenal shunts in patients with bleeding gastric fundal varices

Journal

GASTROENTEROLOGY REPORT
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages 212-218

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gastro/goaa082

Keywords

balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous occlusion; cyanoacrylate injection; gastric varices; gastric variceal bleeding; gastrorenal shunt

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The study evaluated the efficacy and safety of a combined endoscopic-interventional radiologic approach for treating bleeding fundal varices, finding a high rate (85.7%) of complete variceal obturation and a low incidence (10.0%) of procedure-related adverse events with no deaths.
Background: Endoscopic cyanoacrylate (glue) injection of fundal varices may result in life-threatening embolic adverse events through spontaneous gastrorenal shunts (GRSs). Balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous occlusion (BRTOcc) of GRSs during cyanoacrylate injection may prevent serious systemic glue embolization through the shunt. This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a combined endoscopic-interventional radiologic (BRTOcc) approach for the treatment of bleeding fundal varices. Methods: We retrospectively analysed the data of patients who underwent the combined procedure for acutely bleeding fundal varices between January 2010 and April 2018. Data were extracted for patient demographics, clinical and endoscopic findings, technical details, and adverse events of the endoscopic-BRTOcc approach and patient outcomes. Results: We identified 30 patients (13 [43.3%] women; median age 58 [range, 25-92] years) with gastroesophageal varices type 2 (53.3%, 16/30) and isolated gastric varices type 1 (46.7%, 14/30) per Sarin classification, and median clinical and endoscopic follow-up of 151 (range, 4-2,513) days and 98 (range, 3-2,373) days, respectively. The median volume of octyl-cyanoacrylate: Lipiodol injected was 7 (range, 4-22) mL. Procedure-related adverse events occurred in three (10.0%) patients, including transient fever, non-life-threatening pulmonary glue embolism, and an injection-site ulcer bleed. Complete gastric variceal obturation was achieved in 18 of 21 patients (85.7%) at endoscopic follow-up. Delayed variceal rebleeding was confirmed in one patient (3.3%) and suspected in two patients (6.7%). Although no procedure-related deaths occurred, the overall mortality rate was 46.7%, primarily from liver-disease progression and co-morbidities. Conclusion: The combined endoscopic-BRTOcc procedure is a relatively safe and effective technique for bleeding fundal varices, with a high rate of variceal obturation and a low rate of serious adverse events.

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