View clinical trials related to Biliary Anastomotic Stenosis.
Filter by:Liver transplantation is the best treatment option for patients with end-stage liver disease and early unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma. Unfortunately, biliary complication after liver transplantation is still the Achilles' heel, especially in living donor liver transplantation. Early treatment with endoscopy can achieve satisfactory outcomes. Most of the time, biliary anastomotic stricture can be treated by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with balloon dilatation with or without plastic stent insertion. Although endoscopic treatment has been reported to have a successful rate of over 70%, multiple sessions of endoscopic treatment, typically 4 to 5 sessions, are frequently required before adequate stricture dilatation is achieved. This is likely secondary to suboptimal post-dilatation splintage. The most common and popular form of splintage is plastic stent insertion. Unfortunately, plastic biliary stent has a small calibre, and therefore even with multiple stents the configuration of buttressing would not provide a circumferential, evenly distributed buttressing effect at the dilated stricture site. Moreover, given the small calibre of the plastic stent, there is higher resistance on the inner surface of the stent, leading to a higher chance of stent blockage. Many studies have suggested that self-expandable metallic stent (SEMS) is superior to plastic stent in terms of patency rate. However, SEMS is generally reserved for malignant stricture due to its permanent nature, as the traditional SEMS is not removable. Recently, retrievable SEMS (r-SEMS) has been developed, and its indications have been extended to include benign disease conditions. It has been reported that a series of 29 patients with biliary anastomotic stricture treated by r-SEMS, and they concluded that r-SEMS was safe and efficacious. Results of the preliminary study on 5 patients at our centre were favourable; all of the patients had no stricture after retrievable metallic stenting for at least 3 months and no complication was encountered.
DIGEST I Pilot study is a feasibility study for evaluating the safety and efficacy of DCBs.
Biliary complications are one of the most common problems after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT),occurring in up to 24% of patients. Anastomotic strictures have been endoscopically managed with plastic stents placement. Recently, partially and fully covered metal stents have been alternatively used to treat refractory benign biliary stenosis. The investigators purpose is to compare efficacy and safety of metallic stents versus multiple plastic stents in the endoscopic management of post transplant biliary complications.