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A Multicenter, Prospective Study of a New Fully Covered Expandable Metal Biliary Stent for the Palliative Treatment of Malignant Bile Duct Obstruction

Authors :
Bret T. Petersen
Michel Kahaleh
Richard A. Kozarek
David Loren
Kapil Gupta
Thomas Kowalski
Martin Freeman
Yang K. Chen
Malcolm S. Branch
Steven Edmundowicz
Michael Gluck
Kenneth Binmoeller
Todd H. Baron
Raj J. Shah
Timothy Kinney
William Ross
Paul Jowell
David Carr-Locke
Source :
Gastroenterology Research and Practice, Vol 2013 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Wiley, 2013.

Abstract

Background and Study Aims. Endoscopic placement of self-expanding metal stents (SEMSs) is indicated for palliation of inoperable malignant biliary obstruction. A fully covered biliary SEMS (WallFlex Biliary RX Boston Scientific, Natick, USA) was assessed for palliation of extrahepatic malignant biliary obstruction. Patients and Methods. 58 patients were included in this prospective, multicenter series conducted under an FDA-approved IDE. Main outcome measurements included (1) absence of stent occlusion within six months or until death, whichever occurred first and (2) technical success, need for reintervention, bilirubin levels, stent patency, time to stent occlusion, and adverse events. Results. Technical success was achieved in 98% (57/58), with demonstrated acute removability in two patients. Adequate clinical palliation until completion of followup was achievedin 98% (54/55) of evaluable patients, with 1 reintervention due to stent obstruction after 142 days. Mean total bilirubin decreased from 8.9 mg/dL to 1.2 mg/dL at 1 month. Device-related adverse events were limited and included 2 cases of cholecystitis. One stent migrated following radiation therapy. Conclusions. The WallFlex Biliary fully covered stent yielded technically successful placement with uncomplicated acute removal where required, appropriate reduction in bilirubin levels, and low rates of stent migration and occlusion. This SEMS allows successful palliation of malignant extrahepatic biliary obstruction.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16876121 and 1687630X
Volume :
2013
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Gastroenterology Research and Practice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.16529c927eec412098f320e4dd4f2466
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/642428