4.7 Article

Endoscopic management of traumatic bile leaks

Journal

GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY
Volume 65, Issue 7, Pages 1081-1085

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gie.2006.11.038

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Background: Traumatic bile leaks often result in prolonged morbidity and an increased length of hospital stay that requires multimodality management. Data on endoscopic management of traumatic bile leaks are scarce. Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of endotherapy in the management of traumatic bile leaks. Design: Retrospective evaluation of prospectively collected data. Setting: Tertiary academic referral center. Patients: Consecutive patients referred for ERCP after traumatic abdominal injury for the management of bile leaks. Interventions: Biliary stent placement at ERCP Main Outcome Measures: Resolution of a bile leak on follow-up ERCP Results: Ten patients underwent ERCP for the management of a traumatic bile leak over a 3-year period. The etiology included a penetrating injury from a gunshot wound in 5 patients, blunt injuries from a motor vehicle accident in 4 patients, and injury secondary to a fall in 1 patient. Liver injuries were grade 11 in I patient, grade TV in 7 patients, and grade V in 2 patients. A bile leak was treated by biliary stent placement in all patients, and the outcome was successful in 9 of 10 cases (90%). The mean duration of follow-up was 337 days (range, 101-821 days). Nine of 10 patients under-went surgery to control bleeding or other associated injuries. There were no ERCP-related complications. Limitations: Small number of patients. Conclusions: Consideration should be given to incorporate ERCP as first-line therapy in management of traumatic bile leaks, because endobiliary stent placement provides a successful outcome in a majority of cases, irrespective of the severity of injury.

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