Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2021)

The Efficacy and Safety of Balloon Enteroscopy-Assisted Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiography in Pediatric Patients with Surgically Altered Gastrointestinal Anatomy

  • Kensuke Yokoyama,
  • Tomonori Yano,
  • Atsushi Kanno,
  • Eriko Ikeda,
  • Kozue Ando,
  • Tetsurou Miwata,
  • Hiroki Nagai,
  • Yuki Kawasaki,
  • Yamato Tada,
  • Yukihiro Sanada,
  • Kiichi Tamada,
  • Alan Kawarai Lefor,
  • Hironori Yamamoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10173936
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 17
p. 3936

Abstract

Read online

Balloon enteroscopy-assisted endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (BEA-ERC) is useful and feasible in adults with pancreatobiliary diseases, but its efficacy and safety have not been established in pediatric patients. We compared the success rate and safety of BEA-ERC between adults and pediatric patients. This single-center retrospective study reviewed 348 patients (pediatric: 57, adult: 291) with surgically altered gastrointestinal anatomies who underwent BEA-ERC for biliary disorders from January 2007 to December 2019. The success rate of reaching the anastomosis or duodenal papilla was significantly lower in pediatric patients than in adult patients (66.7% vs. 88.0%, p p = 0.014). The rate of adverse events was significantly higher in pediatric patients than in adults (14.2% vs. 7.7%, p = 0.037). However, if the anastomotic sites were reached in pediatric patients, the treatment was highly successful (97.3%). The time of reaching target site was significantly longer in pediatric patients than in adult patients. This study shows that BEA-ERC in pediatric patients is more difficult than that in adult patients. However, in patients where the balloon enteroscope was advanced to the anastomosis, clinical outcomes comparable to those in adults can be achieved.

Keywords