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Endoscopic placement of covered versus uncovered self-expandable metal stents for palliation of malignant gastric outlet obstruction

Authors :
Yamao, Kentaro
Kitano, Masayuki
Chiba, Yasutaka
Ogura, Takeshi
Eguchi, Takaaki
Moriyama, Ichiro
Yamashita, Yukitaka
Kato, Hironari
Kayahara, Takahisa
Hoki, Noriyuki
Okabe, Yoshinobu
Shiomi, Hideyuki
Nakai, Yoshitaka
Kushiyama, Yoshinori
Fujimoto, Yoshifumi
Hayashi, Shiro
Bamba, Shigeki
Kudo, Yasushi
Azemoto, Nobuaki
Ueki, Toshiharu
Uza, Norimitsu
Asada, Masanori
Matsumoto, Kazuya
Nebiki, Hiroko
Takihara, Hiroshi
Noguchi, Chisio
Kamada, Hideki
Nakase, Kojiro
Goto, Daisuke
Sanuki, Tsuyoshi
Koga, Tetsuya
Hashimoto, Shinichi
Nishikiori, Hidefumi
Serikawa, Masahiro
Hanada, Keiji
Hirao, Ken
Ohana, Masaya
Kazuyuki, Imakiire
Kato, Takao
Yoshida, Motoyuki
Kawamoto, Hirofumi
Source :
Gut; 2021, Vol. 70 Issue: 7 p1244-1252, 9p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectiveStenting is an established endoscopic therapy for malignant gastric outlet obstruction (mGOO). The choice of stent (covered vs uncovered) has been examined in prior randomised studies without clear results.DesignIn a multicentre randomised prospective study, we compared covered (CSEMS) with uncovered self-expandable metal stents (UCSEMS) in patients with mGOO; main outcomes were stent dysfunction and patient survival, with subgroup analyses of patients with extrinsic and intrinsic tumours.ResultsOverall survival was poor with no difference between groups (probability at 3 months 49.7% for covered vs 48.4% for uncovered stents; log-rank for overall survival p=0.26). Within that setting of short survival, the proportion of stent dysfunction was significantly higher for uncovered stents (35.2% vs 23.4%, p=0.01) with significantly shorter time to stent dysfunction. This was mainly relevant for patients with extrinsic tumours (stent dysfunction rates for uncovered stents 35.6% vs 17.5%, p<0.01). Subgrouping was also relevant with respect to tumour ingrowth (lower with covered stents for intrinsic tumours; 1.6% vs 27.7%, p<0.01) and stent migration (higher with covered stents for extrinsic tumours: 15.3% vs 2.5%, p<0.01).ConclusionsDue to poor patient survival, minor differences between covered and uncovered stents may be less relevant even if statistically significant; however, subgroup analysis would suggest to use covered stents for intrinsic and uncovered stents for extrinsic malignancies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
70
Issue :
7
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56615742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2020-320775