4.1 Article

Endoscopic ultrasound-guided drainage of abdominal fluid collections after pancreatic surgery: Efficacy and long-term follow-up

Journal

ZEITSCHRIFT FUR GASTROENTEROLOGIE
Volume 54, Issue 9, Pages 1047-1053

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-112032

Keywords

postoperative abdominal fluid collection; drainage; pancreatic resection

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Background/Purpose: Endoscopic ultrasound-guided drainage (EUS-GD) of postoperative abdominal fluid collections (POFC) following pancreatic surgery is used as an alternative or complement to percutaneous drainage (PD) procedure. The present single-center retrospective study evaluates its efficacy and safety. Method: We included consecutive cases with POFC treated by EUS-GD between September 2009 and November 2014 in our department. Technical success, long-term clinical success, recurrence rate and need for surgery were analyzed. Results: 24 procedures in 20 patients (95% after pancreatic resection) were assessed. Indications for surgery included tumors/lesions located in the pancreas (15/20), chronic pancreatitis (3/20) and duodenal adenoma not completely resectable endoscopically (2/20). EUS-GD was performed within a median of 30 days (IQR: 8.25) for a median fluid collection size of 72.5 mm (IQR: 46.25), requiring a mean of 1.2 sessions with placement of a mean of 2.1 plastic stents (7 Fr/10 Fr) per patient for a mean of 89 days (IQR: 127). Microbiology of aspirated fluid revealed positive cultures in 13 patients, mostly polymicrobial, isolated positive for fungal and 3 multidrug-resistant gram negative (MRGN) in 4 cases. An additional transpapillary drainage was inserted in 1/20 patients. 4/20 patients received PD, mostly before EUS-GD. Technical and clinical success was achieved in 20/20 (100%) and 18/20 (90 %) patients, respectively, while 2 patients required re-operation. During follow-up (median 630 days after stent removal, range: 45 - 2160), recurrence occurred in 1/18 (5.5%) patient that was referred for surgery. No death or severe adverse events were noted. Conclusion: EUS-GD is an effective, minimally invasive and safe method for therapy of POFC after pancreatic surgery offering long-term remission in about 95 % of cases.

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