Performing an EUS prior to ERCP in the setting of a positive intraoperative cholangiogram will identify and risk stratify patients for the presence of CBD stones and strictures.
During routine cholecystectomy, surgeons will often perform an intraoperative cholangiogram in an effort to define anatomical landmarks and ensure patency and drainage of the common bile duct. This involves injecting a radiopaque contrast medium into the biliary tree during the operation. Occasionally contrast injection onto the common bile duct will reveal an abnormality and are deemed a "positive intraoperative cholangiogram" (positive IOC). These abnormalities can include the following: single or multiple stones; non-filling of the duodenum by contrast; stenosis or narrowing of the common bile duct (CBD). When discovered these findings are better addressed and treated endoscopically via endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). ERCP's are considered the gold standard for the diagnosis and treatment of positive intraoperative cholangiograms. However, several studies have shown that 40-50% of patients who undergo an ERCP after a "positive" IOC have a normal cholangiogram. Reasons for this include spontaneous stone passage of the stone, dysmotility of the biliary tree, or poor quality, incomplete, or misinterpretation of the IOC. Therefore ERCP's are being performed when they could be avoided. ERCP performance carries significant complications including pancreatitis (5-10%), bleeding, and perforation. Ideally if a safer test to assess the bile duct could be performed immediately prior to the ERCP to confirm the presence of the positive IOC findings, this would ensure that the ERCP is being performed for therapeutic means thus avoiding unnecessary ERCP's. EUS is often performed prior to ERCP's under the same sedation in our endoscopy unit. From 2005 to 2007, two hundred and twenty seven "combined EUS and ERCP procedure were performed.(unpublished internal data). Our experience with "combined" EUS and ERCP procedures has demonstrated that performing an EUS prior to an ERCP will prolong the total procedure time less than 10 minutes with no significant increase in adverse events. Performance of an EUS prior to ERCP to confirm biliary pathology after a "positive" IOC has never been studied in a rigorous fashion.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
34
Wake Forest Baptist Health
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
Bile Duct
Stone seen by EUS confirmed by ERCP
Time frame: 2 years
Lesions
Presence of obstuctinn lesion seen by EUS
Time frame: 2 Years
Bile duct
Diameter of common bile duct and common hepatic duct
Time frame: 2 years
Diverticulum
Presence of periampullary diverticulum seen by endoscopy
Time frame: 2 years
ERCP
Number of ERCP's that could have been avoided
Time frame: 2 years
ERCP
Complications from ERCP
Time frame: 2 years
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