BACKGROUND: In clinical practice, standard endoscopic treatment of biliary stones fails in up to 10% of patients, and more invasive procedures such as percutaneous trans-hepatic interventions or surgery might become necessary. The aim of this multicenter retrospective study, based on prospectively-collected data, was to evaluate both the efficacy and the safety of digital-single operator cholangioscopy (D-SOC) to treat difficult biliary stones in cases with a previous failure of conventional endoscopic methods. METHODS: Only patients with a previous failure of endoscopic standard treatment and a D-SOC-based biliary stone treatment using electrohydraulic lithotripsy (EHL) or laser lithotripsy (LL) were included. The primary endpoint was to evaluate the stone clearance rate per procedure and per patient. RESULTS: Out of 1258 ERCP performed at our centers, 31 cholangioscopes in 21 patients were solely performed for the treatment of difficult biliary stones using EHL or LL. A complete biliary stone removal was achieved in 67.7% (21/31) of all procedures including initial and repeated examinations, while in 35.4% (11/31) of all procedures an incomplete removal was accomplished of which 36.3% had a partial stone removal. In 22 procedures EHL was adopted as techniques to fragment and remove biliary stones, while in 9 procedures LL was used. In both the techniques, the complete stone removal rate and the incomplete stone removal rate were similar (75% vs. 77.7%, P>0.05). Furthermore, the success rate of digital D-SOC to treat difficult biliary stones was assessed per patient: overall, 100% of patients with difficult biliary stones were successfully treated using D-SOC. Only one patient experienced mild cholangitis classified ad mild adverse event following ASGE (American Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy) lexicon. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that digital D-SOC assisted biliary stone treatment is highly efficient for the treat-ment of difficult biliary stones even in such patients in whom previous conventional endoscopic methods to treat biliary stones have failed. Therefore, D-SOC might be considered the new standard of care for these patients, being both, effec-tive and safe.

Digital single-operator cholangioscopy in treating difficult biliary stones: results from a multicenter experience

Maida, Marcello;
2023-01-01

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In clinical practice, standard endoscopic treatment of biliary stones fails in up to 10% of patients, and more invasive procedures such as percutaneous trans-hepatic interventions or surgery might become necessary. The aim of this multicenter retrospective study, based on prospectively-collected data, was to evaluate both the efficacy and the safety of digital-single operator cholangioscopy (D-SOC) to treat difficult biliary stones in cases with a previous failure of conventional endoscopic methods. METHODS: Only patients with a previous failure of endoscopic standard treatment and a D-SOC-based biliary stone treatment using electrohydraulic lithotripsy (EHL) or laser lithotripsy (LL) were included. The primary endpoint was to evaluate the stone clearance rate per procedure and per patient. RESULTS: Out of 1258 ERCP performed at our centers, 31 cholangioscopes in 21 patients were solely performed for the treatment of difficult biliary stones using EHL or LL. A complete biliary stone removal was achieved in 67.7% (21/31) of all procedures including initial and repeated examinations, while in 35.4% (11/31) of all procedures an incomplete removal was accomplished of which 36.3% had a partial stone removal. In 22 procedures EHL was adopted as techniques to fragment and remove biliary stones, while in 9 procedures LL was used. In both the techniques, the complete stone removal rate and the incomplete stone removal rate were similar (75% vs. 77.7%, P>0.05). Furthermore, the success rate of digital D-SOC to treat difficult biliary stones was assessed per patient: overall, 100% of patients with difficult biliary stones were successfully treated using D-SOC. Only one patient experienced mild cholangitis classified ad mild adverse event following ASGE (American Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy) lexicon. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that digital D-SOC assisted biliary stone treatment is highly efficient for the treat-ment of difficult biliary stones even in such patients in whom previous conventional endoscopic methods to treat biliary stones have failed. Therefore, D-SOC might be considered the new standard of care for these patients, being both, effec-tive and safe.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11387/165165
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