Subscribe to RSS

DOI: 10.1055/a-2495-5542
US multicenter outcomes of endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage with lumen-apposing metal stents for acute cholecystitis

Abstract
Background and study aims
EUS-guided gallbladder drainage (EUS-GBD) using lumen apposing metal stents (LAMS) has excellent technical and short-term clinical success for acute cholecystitis (AC). The goals of this study were to determine the long-term clinical outcomes and adverse events (AEs) of EUS-GBD with LAMS.
Patients and methods
A multicenter, retrospective study was conducted at 18 US tertiary care institutions. Inclusion criteria: any AC patient with attempted EUS-GBD with LAMS and minimum 30-day post-procedure follow-up. Long-term clinical success was defined as absence of recurrent acute cholecystitis (RAC) > 30 days and long-term AE was defined as occurring > 30 days from the index procedure.
Results
A total of 109 patients were included. Technical success was achieved in 108 of 109 (99.1%) and initial clinical success in 106 of 109 (97.2%). Long-term clinical success was achieved in 98 of 109 (89.9%) over a median follow-up of 140 days (range 30–1188). On multivariable analysis (MVA), acalculous cholecystitis (odds ratio [OR] 15.93, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.22–208.52, P = 0.04) and the occurrence of a LAMS-specific AE (OR 63.60, 95% CI 5.08–799.29, P <0.01) were associated with RAC. AEs occurred in 38 of 109 patients (34.9%) at any time, and in 10 of 109 (9.17%) > 30 days from the index procedure. Most long-term AEs (7 of 109; 6.42%) were LAMS-specific. No technical or clinical factors were associated with occurrence of AEs. LAMS were removed in 24 of 109 patients (22%). There was no difference in RAC or AEs whether LAMS was removed or not.
Conclusions
EUS-GBD with LAMS has a high rate of long-term clinical success and modest AE rates in patients with AC and is a reasonable destination therapy for high-risk surgical candidates.
Keywords
Endoscopic ultrasonography - Intervention EUS - Biliary tract - Quality and logistical aspects - Performance and complicationsPublication History
Received: 14 July 2024
Accepted after revision: 25 November 2024
Article published online:
13 January 2025
© 2025. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial-License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Georg Thieme Verlag KG
Oswald-Hesse-Straße 50, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany
Yakira David, Gaurav Kakked, Bradley Confer, Ruchit Shah, Harshit Khara, David L Diehl, Matthew Richard Krafft, Sardar M Shah-Khan, John Y Nasr, Petros Benias, Arvind Trindade, Thiruvengadam Muniraj, Harry Aslanian, Prabhleen Chahal, John Rodriguez, Douglas G Adler, Jason Dubroff, Rabi De Latour, Demetrios Tzimas, Lauren Khanna, Gregory Haber, Adam J Goodman, Nicholas Hoerter, Nishi Pandey, Mena Bakhit, Thomas E. Kowalski, David Loren, Austin Chiang, Alexander Schlachterman, Jose Nieto, Ameya Deshmukh, Yervant Ichkhanian, Mouen A. Khashab, Maan El Halabi, Richard S. Kwon, Anoop Prabhu, Ariosto Hernandez-Lara, Andrew Storm, Tyler M. Berzin, John Poneros, Amrita Sethi, Tamas A Gonda, Vladimir Kushnir, Natalie Cosgrove, Daniel Mullady, Abdullah Al-Shahrani, Lionel D'Souza, Jonathan Buscaglia, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Vineet Rolston, Prashant Kedia, Franklin Kasmin, Satish Nagula, Nikhil A Kumta, Christopher DiMaio. US multicenter outcomes of endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage with lumen-apposing metal stents for acute cholecystitis. Endosc Int Open 2025; 13: a24955542.
DOI: 10.1055/a-2495-5542
-
References
- 1
Ansaloni L,
Pisano M,
Coccolini F.
et al.
2016 WSES guidelines on acute calculous cholecystitis. World J Emerg Surg 2016; 11:
25
MissingFormLabel
- 2
Okamoto K,
Suzuki K,
Takada T.
et al.
Tokyo Guidelines 2018: flowchart for the management of acute cholecystitis. J Hepatobiliary
Pancreat Sci 2018; 25: 55-72
MissingFormLabel
- 3
Endo I,
Takada T,
Hwang TL.
et al.
Optimal treatment strategy for acute cholecystitis based on predictive factors: Japan-Taiwan
multicenter cohort study. J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci 2017; 24: 346-361
MissingFormLabel
- 4
Alvino DML,
Fong ZV,
McCarthy CJ.
et al.
Long-term outcomes following percutaneous cholecystostomy tube placement for treatment
of acute calculous cholecystitis. J Gastrointest Surg 2017; 21: 761-769
MissingFormLabel
- 5
Mori Y,
Itoi T,
Baron TH.
et al.
Tokyo Guidelines 2018: management strategies for gallbladder drainage in patients
with acute cholecystitis (with videos). J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci 2018; 25: 87-95
MissingFormLabel
- 6
Yun SS,
Hwang DW,
Kim SW.
et al.
Better treatment strategies for patients with acute cholecystitis and American Society
of Anesthesiologists classification 3 or greater. Yonsei Med J 2010; 51: 540-545
MissingFormLabel
- 7
Altieri MS,
Bevilacqua L,
Yang J.
et al.
Cholecystectomy following percutaneous cholecystostomy tube placement leads to higher
rate of CBD injuries. Surg Endosc 2019; 33: 2686-2690
MissingFormLabel
- 8
Anderloni A,
Buda A,
Vieceli F.
et al.
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided transmural stenting for gallbladder drainage in high-risk
patients with acute cholecystitis: a systematic review and pooled analysis. Surg Endosc
2016; 30: 5200-5208
MissingFormLabel
- 9
Itoi T,
Binmoeller KF,
Shah J.
et al.
Clinical evaluation of a novel lumen-apposing metal stent for endosonography-guided
pancreatic pseudocyst and gallbladder drainage (with videos). Gastrointest Endosc
2012; 75: 870-876
MissingFormLabel
- 10
Bhatt MN,
Ghio M,
Sadri L.
et al.
Percutaneous cholecystostomy in acute cholecystitis-predictors of recurrence and interval
cholecystectomy. J Surg Res 2018; 232: 539-546
MissingFormLabel
- 11
Chan SM,
Teoh AYB,
Chiu PWY.
et al.
Advanced gallbladder interventions after endoscopic ultrasonography-guided gallbladder
drainage. Techniq Innov Gastrointest Endosc 2020; 22: 24-26
MissingFormLabel
- 12
Tan YY,
Zhao G,
Wang D.
et al.
A new strategy of minimally invasive surgery for cholecystolithiasis: calculi removal
and gallbladder preservation. Dig Surg 2013; 30: 466-471
MissingFormLabel
- 13
Higa JT,
Sahar N,
Kozarek RA.
et al.
EUS-guided gallbladder drainage with a lumen-apposing metal stent versus endoscopic
transpapillary gallbladder drainage for the treatment of acute cholecystitis (with
videos). Gastrointest Endosc 2019; 90: 483-492
MissingFormLabel
- 14
Luk SW,
Irani S,
Krishnamoorthi R.
et al.
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage versus percutaneous cholecystostomy
for high risk surgical patients with acute cholecystitis: a systematic review and
meta-analysis. Endoscopy 2019; 51: 722-732
MissingFormLabel
- 15
Mohan BP,
Khan SR,
Trakroo S.
et al.
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage, transpapillary drainage, or percutaneous
drainage in high risk acute cholecystitis patients: a systematic review and comparative
meta-analysis. Endoscopy 2020; 52: 96-106
MissingFormLabel
- 16
Oh D,
Song TJ,
Cho DH.
et al.
EUS-guided cholecystostomy versus endoscopic transpapillary cholecystostomy for acute
cholecystitis in high-risk surgical patients. Gastrointest Endosc 2019; 89: 289-298
MissingFormLabel
- 17
Siddiqui A,
Kunda R,
Tyberg A.
et al.
Three-way comparative study of endoscopic ultrasound-guided transmural gallbladder
drainage using lumen-apposing metal stents versus endoscopic transpapillary drainage
versus percutaneous cholecystostomy for gallbladder drainage in high-risk surgical
patients with acute cholecystitis: clinical outcomes and success in an International,
Multicenter Study. Surg Endosc 2019; 33: 1260-1270
MissingFormLabel
- 18
Teoh AYB,
Kitano M,
Itoi T.
et al.
Endosonography-guided gallbladder drainage versus percutaneous cholecystostomy in
very high-risk surgical patients with acute cholecystitis: an international randomised
multicentre controlled superiority trial (DRAC 1). Gut 2020; 69: 1085-1091
MissingFormLabel
- 19
Dollhopf M,
Larghi A,
Will U.
et al.
EUS-guided gallbladder drainage in patients with acute cholecystitis and high surgical
risk using an electrocautery-enhanced lumen-apposing metal stent device. Gastrointest
Endosc 2017; 86: 636-643
MissingFormLabel
- 20
Walter D,
Teoh AY,
Itoi T.
et al.
EUS-guided gall bladder drainage with a lumen-apposing metal stent: a prospective
long-term evaluation. Gut 2016; 65: 6-8
MissingFormLabel
- 21
Yokoe M,
Hata J,
Takada T.
et al.
Tokyo Guidelines 2018: diagnostic criteria and severity grading of acute cholecystitis
(with videos). J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci 2018; 25: 41-54
MissingFormLabel
- 22
Cotton PB,
Eisen GM,
Aabakken L.
et al.
A lexicon for endoscopic adverse events: report of an ASGE workshop. Gastrointest
Endosc 2010; 71: 446-454
MissingFormLabel
- 23
James TW,
Krafft M,
Croglio M.
et al.
EUS-guided gallbladder drainage in patients with cirrhosis: results of a multicenter
retrospective study. Endosc Int Open 2019; 7: E1099-E1104
MissingFormLabel
- 24
Cho DH,
Jo SJ,
Lee JH.
et al.
Feasibility and safety of endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage using
a newly designed lumen-apposing metal stent. Surg Endosc 2019; 33: 2135-2141
MissingFormLabel
- 25
James TW,
Baron TH.
EUS-guided gallbladder drainage: A review of current practices and procedures. Endosc
Ultrasound 2019; 8: S28-S34
MissingFormLabel
- 26
Ogura T,
Higuchi K.
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage: Current status and future prospects.
Dig Endosc 2019; 31: 55-64
MissingFormLabel
- 27
Boregowda U,
Umapathy C,
Nanjappa A.
et al.
Endoscopic ultrasound guided gallbladder drainage - is it ready for prime time?. World
J Gastrointest Pharmacol Ther 2018; 9: 47-54
MissingFormLabel
- 28
Chan SM,
Teoh AYB,
Yip HC.
et al.
Feasibility of per-oral cholecystoscopy and advanced gallbladder interventions after
EUS-guided gallbladder stenting (with video). Gastrointest Endosc 2017; 85: 1225-1232
MissingFormLabel
- 29
Teoh AYB,
Serna C,
Penas I.
et al.
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided gallbladder drainage reduces adverse events compared
with percutaneous cholecystostomy in patients who are unfit for cholecystectomy. Endoscopy
2017; 49: 130-138
MissingFormLabel
- 30
Tyberg A,
Saumoy M,
Sequeiros EV.
et al.
EUS-guided versus percutaneous gallbladder drainage: isn't it time to convert?. J
Clin Gastroenterol 2018; 52: 79-84
MissingFormLabel
- 31
Kim SB,
Gu MG,
Kim KH.
et al.
Long-term outcomes of acute acalculous cholecystitis treated by non-surgical management.
Medicine (Baltimore) 2020; 99: e19057
MissingFormLabel
- 32
Noh SY,
Gwon DI,
Ko GY.
et al.
Role of percutaneous cholecystostomy for acute acalculous cholecystitis: clinical
outcomes of 271 patients. Eur Radiol 2018; 28: 1449-1455
MissingFormLabel
- 33
Abbas SH,
Ghazanfar MA,
Gordon-Weeks AN.
et al.
Acalculous Cholecystitis: Is an elective interval cholecystectomy necessary. Dig Surg
2018; 35: 171-176
MissingFormLabel
- 34
Barie PS,
Eachempati SR.
Acute acalculous cholecystitis. Gastroenterol Clin North Am 2010; 39: 343-357
MissingFormLabel
- 35
Huffman JL,
Schenker S.
Acute acalculous cholecystitis: a review. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol 2010; 8: 15-22
MissingFormLabel
- 36
Cho SH,
Oh D,
Song TJ.
et al.
Comparison of the effectiveness and safety of lumen-apposing metal stents and anti-migrating
tubular self-expandable metal stents for EUS-guided gallbladder drainage in high surgical
risk patients with acute cholecystitis. Gastrointest Endosc 2020; 91: 543-550
MissingFormLabel