Endoscopy 2006; 38(6): 571-574
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-925027
Original Article
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Recurrence Rate of Anastomotic Biliary Strictures in Patients who have had Previous Successful Endoscopic Therapy for Anastomotic Narrowing after Orthotopic Liver Transplantation

W.  M.  Alazmi1 , E.  L.  Fogel1 , J.  L.  Watkins1 , L.  McHenry1 , J.  A.  Tector1 , J.  Fridell1 , P.  Mosler1 , S.  Sherman1 , G.  A.  Lehman1
  • 1 Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
Further Information

Publication History

Submitted 24 May 2005

Accepted after revision 4 October 2005

Publication Date:
27 June 2006 (online)

Background and Study Aims: The development of anastomotic strictures is one of the most common complications of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) with choledochocholedochostomy anastomosis. Endoscopic therapy with balloon dilation and/or stent placement is an effective therapy. The aim of this study was to assess the recurrence rate of anastomotic strictures and the features that predict recurrence after previously successful endoscopic therapy.
Patients and Methods: We searched the endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) database for all patients who had had an OLT who were undergoing ERCP. The study cohort consisted of post-OLT patients who had a recurrence of anastomotic stricture after initial resolution following a course of endoscopic therapy.
Results: A total of 916 OLT operations were performed during the study period from June 1994 to November 2004. Out of this group, 143 patients (15.6 %) were diagnosed with anastomotic stricture and underwent a total of 423 ERCPs for endoscopic treatment. Twelve patients who are still undergoing endoscopic therapy were excluded from the analysis. The technical success rate was 96.6 %, and the endoscopic therapy was successful in 82 % of patients; 18 % had a recurrence of cholestasis and ERCP revealed a recurrence of the anastomotic stricture that required intervention. The mean time of follow-up after stent removal was 28 months (range 1 - 114 months). The study did not reveal any clinical or endoscopic parameters that could predict recurrence, though the presence of a biliary leak at initial ERCP and a longer time to initial presentation were factors that showed a trend toward an increased likelihood of recurrence.
Conclusions: Biliary strictures remain a common complication after OLT, and in nearly one in five patients these strictures recur after initially successful endoscopic therapy. There were no clinical or endoscopic parameters identified in this study that predicted recurrence. Further study is needed to determine what type of endoscopic therapy would minimize the risk of stricture recurrence.

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G. Lehman, M. D.

Indiana University Medical Center

550 North University Boulevard · Indianapolis · Indiana 46202 · USA·

Fax: +1-317-278-0164

Email: glehman@iupui.edu

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