Endoscopy International Open (Apr 2023)

Efficacy of the specialized scissor-type knife for gastric endoscopic submucosal dissection: a propensity score matched retrospective study

  • Hirosato Tamari,
  • Shiro Oka,
  • Takahiro Kotachi,
  • Hajime Teshima,
  • Junichi Mizuno,
  • Motomitsu Fukuhara,
  • Hidenori Tanaka,
  • Akiyoshi Tsuboi,
  • Ken Yamashita,
  • Hidehiko Takigawa,
  • Ryo Yuge,
  • Yuji Urabe,
  • Koji Arihiro,
  • Shinji Tanaka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1971-1508
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 04
pp. E315 – E321

Abstract

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Background and study aims Prevention of bleeding and perforation during gastric endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is important. Scissor-type knives can accurately grasp and incise the targeted tissue using electrosurgical currents, thereby eliminating unexpected incisions. The SB Knife GX, a scissor-type knife specialized for gastric ESD, was released in June 2016 in Japan. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of gastric ESD using the SB Knife GX. Patients and methods A total of 716 patients who underwent gastric ESD at Hiroshima University Hospital between July 2016 and December 2020 were retrospectively reviewed. From these, 671 patients underwent ESD using the IT Knife 2 (IT-2 group), while 45 underwent ESD using an SB Knife GX (SB-GX group). After propensity score matching, the procedure time, specimen size, en bloc and complete resection rates, and intraoperative bleeding, delayed bleeding, and perforation rates were evaluated. Results No significant differences were observed in mean procedure time (SB-GX group: 115 ± 165 min; IT-2 group: 95 ± 61 min; P = 0.82) and en bloc and complete resection rates between the two groups. Intraoperative bleeding rates were significantly lower in the SB-GX group than in the IT-2 group (18 % vs. 40 %; P = 0.01), and there were no differences in delayed bleeding (4 % vs. 4 %) or perforation (0 % vs. 4 %) between the two groups. Conclusions The SB Knife GX was proven to be useful for control of intraoperative bleeding during gastric ESD, although the procedure time tended to be longer.