Biliary Tract Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multicenter Randomized Trial Comparing the Use of Touch and no Touch Guide-wire Techniques for Deep Biliary Cannulation: the TNT Study
The specific goal of this study is to compare the deep biliary cannulation rate and complication rates associated with use of touch and no touch guide-wire biliary cannulation techniques.
The most common technique used to achieve primary deep biliary cannulation is the standard
contrast-assisted method, in which a catheter or sphincterotome is introduced into the
papilla in the direction of the bile duct and a contrast medium injected to confirm that the
duct has been cannulated.
The biliary guidewire cannulation technique consists of the introduction of a guide-wire into
the bile duct instead of contrast injection as the first maneuver.
The benefit of this technique, compared with classic contrast cannulation, has been
demonstrated in several studies which show similar results and have been analyzed in a recent
meta-analysis, including 5 studies and 1762 patients, and demonstrating that the use of the
guide-wire technique significantly improved the primary cannulation rate from 74.9% to 85.3%.
More importantly, significantly reduced the incidence of PEP from 8.6% to 1.6%.
There are several variations of this technique; the tip of the sphincterotome is inserted
initially a few millimeters through the papillary orifice and then introduce the guide-wire
to the target ("touch technique"). Another variation is direct cannulation with the
guide-wire hovering a few millimeters through the catheter or sphincterotome ("no touch
technique").
To date, there are no randomized controlled trials comparing the two above described way to
access to biliary duct regarding efficacy and rate of complications.
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