Journal of Pediatric Surgery Open (Dec 2023)

Isolated tracheo-esophageal fistula in children: Analysis of a large multicentric series and proposal of a comprehensive treatment algorithm

  • Gaia Brenco,
  • Patricio Varela,
  • Mariano Boglione,
  • Diana Romero,
  • Laura Suarez Homi,
  • Jaime Penchyna Grub,
  • Patricio Cieri,
  • Gaston Bellia,
  • Michele Ugazzi,
  • Rebecca Maunsell,
  • Alejandro Cocciaglia,
  • Oliviero Sacco,
  • Roberto D'Agostino,
  • Eduardo Leopold Gonzalez,
  • Michele Torre

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4
p. 100059

Abstract

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Background: Isolated tracheo-esophageal fistulas (TEF) are rare and challenging, possibly leading to severe complications. We evaluated the outcomes in a large series of patients treated in 9 referral Centers for airway surgery, and suggested an ideal management algorithm. Methods: A multicentric retrospective study on TEF was performed. Results: 186 cases were collected. Among 101 patients with recurrent TEF after EA repair, 1 was treated successfully with thoracoscopy, 23 with open surgery with TEF division and tissue interposition, with 15 complete resolution (65 %), 2 TEF recurrence (9 %) and 6 other complications (26 %), and 77 received TCA endoscopic cauterization, with complete resolution in 61 (79 %). Among 54 patients with congenital H-type fistula, 1 received conservative treatment with resolution; 4 underwent thoracoscopy (50 % resolution); 6 had endoscopic cauterization (33 % resolution); 44 received open surgery, with 43 (98 %) successes. In the last group, the majority of TEF was ligated and divided with tissue interposition. Among 26 post-traumatic fistulas (mechanical trauma, battery or caustic ingestion), 6 patients received endoscopic procedure and 5 of them (83 %) reached complete resolution. The other 19 received open surgery (trans-tracheal direct FTE closure with tracheal resection), and 12 had complete resolution (63 %). Two patients eventually died and complication rate was 23 %. Other 5 cases (3 Bronchial-Esophageal Fistulas and 2 TEF after cleft repair) were treated endoscopically or with open approach. Conclusion: Endoscopic cauterization can be the preferred treatment for recurrent TEF after EA, while for the congenital H-type and post-traumatic TEF the open approach remains our first choice.

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