Marginal Ulcer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Laparoscopic Revision Gastric Bypass Surgery for Chronic Marginal Ulcers: a 10 Year Experience
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of revision gastroplasty along with other adjunct procedures in the treatment of intractable / chronic marginal ulcers after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. A secondary aim is the identification of good and poor outcome predictors after revisional strategies for intractable or chronic marginal ulcer.
The epidemic of overweight and obesity in the United States of America along with its
comorbidities continues to expand. Bariatric surgery has demonstrated to be the most
effective and sustained method to control severe obesity and its comorbidities. For
instance, type 2 diabetes mellitus was completely resolved in 76.8%, systemic arterial
hypertension was resolved in 61.7%, dyslipidemia improved in 70% and obstructive sleep
apnea-hypopnea syndrome was resolved in 85.7%. Furthermore, bariatric surgery significantly
increases life expectancy (89%) and decreases overall mortality (30-40%), particularly
deaths from diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. Lastly, preliminary evidence about
downstream savings associated with bariatric surgery offset the initial costs in 2 to 4
years.
Since 1998, there has been a substantially progressive increase in bariatric surgery. In
2005, the ASMBS reported that 81% of bariatric procedures were approached laparoscopically
and in 2007, 205,000 people had bariatric surgery in the United States from which
approximately 80% of these were Gastric Bypass. Moreover, there is a mismatch between
eligibility and receipt of bariatric surgery with just less than 1% of the eligible
population being treated for morbid obesity through bariatric surgery. Along with the
increasing number of elective primary weight loss procedures, up to 20% of post RYGB
patients cannot sustain their weight loss beyond 2 to 3 years after the primary bariatric
procedure. Thus, revisional surgery for poor weight loss and re-operations for technical or
mechanical complications will rise in a parallel manner.
A common late complication after gastric bypass surgery is marginal ulceration, an ulcer at
the margins of the gastrojejunostomy on the jejunal side. Its incidence after RYGB ranges
from as low as 0.6 to as high as 16%. After 1,040 laparoscopic RYGB surgeries, the incidence
rate, in our hands, is 1.4% and mainly related to NSAID´s use. In observational cohort
studies, the presence of specific technical factors - staple-line dehiscence or
gastro-gastric fistula, enlarged pouch, foreign material and local ischemia - and
environmental factors - tobacco, NSAID´s, alcohol consumption, and H pylori infection among
others - have been associated with marginal ulceration however the exact etiopathogenesis
has not been completely elucidated.
Similar to peptic ulcer disease (PUD), most marginal ulcers respond to medical therapy,
specifically sucralfate and acid-lowering medication. In contrast, when perforation,
obstruction, penetration, bleeding and/or intractability presents, complex or complicated
ulcer disease, warrants surgical intervention.
The intestinal mucosa is not typically exposed to gastric acid, which is neutralized by the
alkaline biliopancreatic secretions. The jejunal mucosa has no natural barriers; when
exposed to gastric acid, it ulcerates easily. Capella & Capella demonstrated that
transecting the gastric segments significantly reduce staple-line dehiscence; this is the
so-called divided gastric bypass. In the retrospective analysis of their consecutive series,
the incidence for gastro-gastric fistula (GGF) formation after undivided gastric bypass
(GBP) was 23%, after a partially divided GBP was 19%, after a completely divided GBP was 2%
and after complete transection with interposition of the jejunal limb was 0% (p <0.001).
MacLean et al confirmed that divided primary gastric bypass decreases GGF formation (29% vs.
3%). Also, patients who developed marginal ulcers had a lower pH as well as a greater time
with a pH less than 2 correlating 100% with the presence of GGF; closure of the GGF
increased the pH in the pouch with subsequent healing of the marginal ulcer.
An unusually large gastric pouch (such as horizontal pouches, retained fundus, long lesser
curvature based pouches or enlarged after initially being sized adequately) contain more
acid-producing parietal cells. Increased acid production in the pouch carries the risk of
developing marginal ulcers. Acid secretion in the small pouch after RYGB is virtually
absent. Smith et al measured basal and pentagastrin-stimulated gastric acid secretion from
the pouch were significantly lower compared to age and sex-matched controls. Likewise,
MacLean et al reported a significantly lower pH & greater time with pH <2 in the gastric
pouches of marginal ulcers and/or GGF patients after RYGB compared to non-complicated RYGB
controls. Thus, creating a esophagojejunostomy would solve the gastric acid factor for
developing marginal ulcers however the high incidence of anastomotic failure and unknown
weight loss results are prohibitive for this approach. Sapala et al created a micro-pouch or
cardiojejunostomy to decrease at maximum the parietal cell mass with a low incidence of
marginal ulcers (0.01% at 1 years of follow-up) as well as to limit the pouch dilation. By
Histopathology with a semi-quantitative approach, Gustavsson et al reported less
acid-producing parietal cells within smaller pouches. With his next study (n=12), Gustavsson
et al, demonstrated a significantly higher time exposure to a pH<4 in patients with marginal
ulcer after RYGB (4x3cm pouch) compared to controls (p< 0.01). Furthermore, after downsizing
the pouch, repeated pH-metry showed the % of time with pH <4 declined from 100% prior to 6%
after revisionary surgery.
The anastomotic techniques influence the incidence of marginal ulcers. Capella & Capella
reported a consecutive series with significant decrement from 5.1% to 1.5% (p< 0.001) after
switching from a stapled to a hand-sewn anastomosis. Likewise, after changing from an inner
layer of absorbable suture and an outer layer of nonabsorbable material to a double-layer of
absorbable suture the incidence rate improved from 1.6% to 0%. Dr Schauer´s group confirmed
a significant improvement in the incidence rate of MU from a 2.6% with the use of
nonabsorbable suture for the outer layer to 1.3% after the change to absorbable suture for
both layers (p < 0.001).
Local ischemia, in the immediate postoperative period, is probably secondary to technical
reasons. Fundamental aspects for decreasing tension and local ischemia at the
gastrojejunostomy are dissection of the tissues around the pouch without devascularizing the
lesser curvature and complete mobilization of a well-perfused Roux limb.
In epidemiological, clinical and experimental studies, NSAID´s have been identified as one
of the three major risk factors for PUD. Wilson et al found NSAID´s consumption to
significantly increase the risk for marginal ulcer following RYGB (adjusted OR 11.5, 95%CI
4.8-28).
In epidemiological, clinical and experimental studies, Tobacco is another major risk factor
for PUD. Smoking carries an overall relative risk of 2.2 (95%CI, 2.0-2.3).
Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) infection carries an overall relative risk of 3.3 (95%CI,
2.6-4.4) for developing PUD. A synergistic relationship exists between H pylori infection
and NSAID´s consumption for developing PUD with an overall risk of 3.5 (95%CI, 1.26-9.96)
compared to either H pylori or NSAID´s negative individuals. In Papasavas et al study,
preoperative H. pylori testing with prophylactic eradication did not decrease the incidence
of MU or erosive pouch gastritis.
The pathophysiological mechanisms of damage to the gastric mucosa of ethanol and alcoholic
beverages are poorly understood. There are no studies available about the effect of alcohol
on marginal ulcer development after RYGB.
Cocaine use is responsible for approximately 143,000 Emergency Department visits annually;
19% of American, between 18 to 25 years old, have used cocaine: more than 1% of the
Americans use cocaine at least once a week; and approximately 50% of all drug-related deaths
were secondary to Cocaine. The temporal association between smoking cocaine (crack) and GI
tract manifestations include ulceration, perforation, visceral infarction, and
retroperitoneal fibrosis.
Re-operative strategies for addressing chronic marginal ulcers after gastric bypass have
been scarcely described and mostly are reports of a case or small series of cases. The
revisional strategies described are I) ulcer excision with revision of the gastrojejunostomy
and gastric transection if needed, II) ulcer excision with pouch downsizing and redo of
gastrojejunostomy, III) ulcer excision with resection of the ischemic Roux limb segment, and
IV) ulcer excision and reversal. The possible adjuvant procedures includes I) proximal
remnant gastrectomy (partial gastrectomy), and II) vagotomy.
In summary, there is scant information about late complications after gastric bypass
especially after the widespread adoption of the laparoscopic approach and the modern
anatomical construct of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass surgery.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Retrospective
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