The purpose of this study is to give doctors who perform Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) procedures a better idea as to the best techniques to use in order to examine the bile duct as quickly and safely as possible.
Sometimes, in the course of a regular ERCP procedure, techniques used by the doctor to pass a wire into the bile duct can result in the pancreas duct being entered instead. When this happens, the doctor may either remove the wire (known as "single wire" technique) or leave it in and use a second wire ("double wire") to enter the bile duct. This study will try to determine whether the "double wire" technique or the "single wire" technique removing the wire is the safest and most efficient.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
161
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, North Carolina, United States
Success of biliary cannulation
The primary outcome is incidence of successful deep biliary cannulation within 10 minutes.
Time frame: 10 minutes after randomization
Success of biliary cannulation
Number of attempts required for successful biliary cannulation
Time frame: 2 days after the procedure
Time to successful biliary cannulation
Time frame: 2 days after the procedure
Post-ERCP pancreatitis
Time frame: 2 days after the procedure
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