Clinical Endoscopy (Jan 2024)

Efficacy of an assistive guide tube for improved endoscopic access to gastrointestinal lesions: an study in a porcine model

  • Dong Seok Lee,
  • Jeong-Sik Byeon,
  • Sang Gyun Kim,
  • Ji Won Kim,
  • Kook Lae Lee,
  • Ji Bong Jeong,
  • Yong Jin Jung,
  • Hyoun Woo Kang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5946/ce.2022.161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 1
pp. 82 – 88

Abstract

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Background/Aims Guide tube-assisted endoscopy for procedures that require repeated endoscopic access is safer and more effective than conventional endoscopy. However, its effectiveness has not been confirmed in animal studies. We assessed the usefulness of guide tube-assisted endoscopic procedures in an in vivo porcine model. Methods Five different guide tube-assisted endoscopic procedures were performed by experienced endoscopists on a pig weighing 32 kg. To evaluate the efficacy of these procedures, we compared the endoscopic approach time when a guide tube was used to that when it was not. Additional endoscopic procedures using a guide tube were performed, including multiple foreign body extractions, multiple polypectomies, and multiple submucosal dissections. To evaluate safety, we compared the insertion force into the proximal esophagus between the guide tube and conventional overtube methods. Results Using the endoscopic approach with a guide tube required a shorter average approach time to reach the three target lesions than when using the endoscopic approach without a guide tube (p<0.001). Compared to the conventional overtube method, the guide tube method produced a lower average resistance during insertion into the upper esophagus (p<0.001). Conclusions Guide tube-assisted endoscopic procedures are effective and safe for repeated endoscopic access in an in vivo porcine model.

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