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Systematic review with meta-analysis: Endoscopic balloon dilatation for Crohn's disease strictures

Authors :
Morar, P.S.
Faiz, O.
Warusavitarne, J.
Brown, S.
Cohen, R.
Hind, D.
Abercrombie, J.
Ragunath, K.
Sanders, D.S.
Arnott, I.
Wilson, G.
Bloom, S.
Arebi, N.
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Background: Endoscopic balloon dilatation (EBD) is recognised treatment for symptomatic Crohn's strictures. Several case series report its efficacy. A systematic analysis for overall efficacy can inform the design of future studies. \ud \ud Aim: To examine symptomatic (SR) and technical response (TR) and adverse events (AE) of EBD. Stricture characteristics were also explored. \ud \ud Methods: A systematic search strategy of COCHRANE, MEDLINE and EMBASE was performed. All original studies reporting outcomes of EBD for Crohn's strictures were included. SR was defined as obstructive symptom-free outcome at the end of follow-up, TR as post-dilatation passage of the endoscope through a stricture, and adverse event as the presence of complication (perforation and/or bleeding). Pooled event rates across studies were expressed with summative statistics. \ud \ud Results: Twenty-five studies included 1089 patients and 2664 dilatations. Pooled event rates for SR, TR, complications and perforations were 70.2% (95% CI: 60-78.8%), 90.6% (95% CI: 87.8-92.8%), 6.4% (95% CI: 5.0-8.2) and 3% (95% CI: 2.2-4.0%) respectively. Cumulative surgery rate at 5 year follow-up was 75%. Pooled unweighted TR, SR, complication, perforation and surgery rates were 84%, 45%, 15%, 9% and 21% for de novo and 84%, 58%, 22%, 5% and 32% for anastomotic strictures. Outcomes between two stricture types were no different on subgroup meta-analysis. \ud \ud Conclusions: Efficacy and complication rates for endoscopic balloon dilatation were higher than previously reported. From the few studies with 5 year follow-up the majority required surgery. Future studies are needed to determine whether endoscopic balloon dilatation has significant long-term benefits.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02692813
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....89ed50093d35ddc0516af2ce1a1a0d3f