Endoscopy 2021; 53(04): 429-448
DOI: 10.1055/a-1397-3198
Guideline

Endoscopic management of ampullary tumors: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) Guideline

Geoffroy Vanbiervliet
 1   Department of Digestive Endoscopy, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice, Nice, France
,
Marin Strijker
 2   Department of Surgery, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
,
Marianna Arvanitakis
 3   Gastroenterology, Hepatopancreatology and Digestive Oncology, Erasme Hospital, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium
,
Arthur Aelvoet
 2   Department of Surgery, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
,
Urban Arnelo
 4   Department of Surgery, Centre for Digestive Diseases, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden
,
 5   Department of Gastroenterology, Evangelisches Krankenhaus Düsseldorf, Dusseldorf, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany
,
Olivier Busch
 2   Department of Surgery, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
,
 6   Gastroenterology and Hepatology Department, Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc, Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium
,
Lumir Kunovsky
 7   Department of Gastroenterology and Internal Medicine, University Hospital Brno, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic
 8   Department of Surgery, University Hospital Brno, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic
,
Alberto Larghi
 9   Digestive Endoscopy Unit, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy
,
10   Aziende Socio Sanitaria Territoriale Rhodense, Gastroenterology, Garbagnate Milanese, Italy
,
Alan Moss
11   Department of Endoscopic Services, Western Health, Melbourne, Australia
12   Department of Medicine, Western Health, Melbourne Medical School, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
,
Bertrand Napoleon
13   Service de Gastroentérologie, Hôpital Privé Jean Mermoz, Ramsay Générale de Santé, Lyon, France
,
Manu Nayar
14   Department of Gastroenterology, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
,
15   Department of Gastroenterology, Georges-Pompidou European Hospital, AP-HP Centre - Université de Paris, Paris, France
,
Stefan Seewald
16   Gastroenterology Center, Klinik Hirslanden, Zurich, Switzerland
,
17   Department of Gastroenterology, Hôpital Nord, Assistance publique des hôpitaux de Marseille, Marseille, France
,
Jeanin E. van Hooft
18   Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands
› Author Affiliations
 

Main Recommendations

1 ESGE recommends against diagnostic/therapeutic papillectomy when adenoma is not proven.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

2 ESGE recommends endoscopic ultrasound and abdominal magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) for staging of ampullary tumors.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

3 ESGE recommends endoscopic papillectomy in patients with ampullary adenoma without intraductal extension, because of good results regarding outcome (technical and clinical success, morbidity, and recurrence).
Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

4 ESGE recommends en bloc resection of ampullary adenomas up to 20–30 mm in diameter to achieve R0 resection, for optimizing the complete resection rate, providing optimal histopathology, and reduction of the recurrence rate after endoscopic papillectomy.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

5 ESGE suggests considering surgical treatment of ampullary adenomas when endoscopic resection is not feasible for technical reasons (e. g. diverticulum, size > 4 cm), and in the case of intraductal involvement (of > 20 mm). Surveillance thereafter is still mandatory.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

6 ESGE recommends direct snare resection without submucosal injection for endoscopic papillectomy.
Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

7 ESGE recommends prophylactic pancreatic duct stenting to reduce the risk of pancreatitis after endoscopic papillectomy.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

8 ESGE recommends long-term monitoring of patients after endoscopic papillectomy or surgical ampullectomy, based on duodenoscopy with biopsies of the scar and of any abnormal area, within the first 3 months, at 6 and 12 months, and thereafter yearly for at least 5 years.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.


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Source and Scope

This is the first part of a two-part guideline from the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) and covers the endoscopic management of ampullary tumors. The companion guideline will give guidance on superficial nonampullary tumors of the duodenum.

Abbreviations

APC: argon plasma coagulation
CA-EGD: cap-assisted esophagogastroduodenoscopy
CI: confidence interval
CT: computed tomography
EMR: endoscopic mucosal resection
ERCP: endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
ESGE: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
EUS: endoscopic ultrasound
EUS-BD: endoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary drainage
EUS-FNA/B: endoscopic ultrasound fine-needle aspiration/biopsy
GRADE: Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation
IDUS: intraductal ultrasound
IHC: immunohistochemistry
LST-p: laterally spreading tumor involving the papilla
MRCP: magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography
OR: odds ratio
RCT: randomized controlled trial
RFA: radiofrequency ablation
SEMS: self-expandable metal stent

1 Introduction

Ampullary tumors are increasingly diagnosed nowadays because of better accuracy of gastroscopy and endoscopic detection technologies. Endoscopy has taken an important role in management of these lesions, particularly in a curative setting. Nevertheless, diagnostic and therapeutic strategies have to be clearly defined.

This Guideline does not discuss ampullary and duodenal lesions associated with predisposing genetic syndromes, including familial adenomatous polyposis, or lesions of submucosal and neuroendocrine origin, as they are considered in another Guideline from the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) [1]. While indications for endoscopic treatment and follow-up may be different between the sporadic and polyposis-related forms, the statements regarding diagnosis, evaluation, technical modalities of endoscopic papillectomy, and management of complications are similar. Furthermore, while the majority of ampullary lesions involve the major papilla, the recommendations in this guidance should also be applied in the case of a tumor of the minor papilla in a patient with a pancreas divisum.


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2 Methods

ESGE commissioned this Guideline (Guideline Committee Chair, J.v.H) and appointed a Guideline leader (G.V.) who invited the listed authors to participate in the project development. The key questions were prepared by the guideline leader and then approved by the other project members. The coordinating team established task force subgroups, each with its own leader, that were assigned key questions (see Appendix 1s, online-only Supplementary Material).

Each task force performed a systematic literature search to prepare evidence-based and well-balanced statements on their assigned key questions. The literature search was performed for English-language articles in MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane database, focusing on meta-analyses and fully published prospective studies, particularly randomized controlled trials (RCTs), performed in humans. Retrospective analyses and pilot studies were also included if they addressed topics not covered in the prospective studies. The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) system was adopted to define the strength of recommendation and the quality of evidence. Each task force proposed statements on their assigned key questions which were discussed during a web meeting in July 2020. Literature searches were re-run in September 2020. This time-point should be the starting point in the search for new evidence for future updates to this Guideline.

In September 2020, a draft prepared by G.V. was sent to all group members for review. The draft was also reviewed by two external reviewers and then sent for further comments to the ESGE member societies and individual members. After agreement on a final version, the manuscript was submitted to the journal Endoscopy for publication. All authors agreed on the final revised version.

This Guideline was issued in 2021 and will be considered for review in 2025, or sooner if new and relevant evidence becomes available. Any updates to the Guideline in the interim period will be noted on the ESGE website: http://www.esge.com/esge-guidelines.html.


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3 Diagnosis of ampullary tumors (see [Fig. 1])

Zoom Image
Fig. 1 Diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for ampullary tumor. EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; MRCP, magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography; IDE, intraductal extension; EUS-FNA/B, endoscopic ultrasound fine needle aspiration/biopsy; LGD, low grade dysplasia; HGD, high grade dysplasia; Tis, tumor/carcinoma in situ; RFA, radiofrequency ablation; APC, argon plasma coagulation; EMR, endoscopic mucosal resection.

3.1 Epidemiology, histology, and staging classification

Recommendation

ESGE suggests using the latest TNM classification for staging ampullary tumors.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Neoplasia of the ampulla of Vater is a rare disease with an incidence of less than 1 per 100 000 per year and representing only 0.6 %–0.8 % of the digestive cancers, with a male to female sex ratio of 1.5 [2] [3]. Although the incidence of the disease amongst young adults (< 45 years) has risen during the last 20 years, its trend has remained more stable in older age groups [4].

The majority of benign or malignant ampullary tumors are sporadic and involve the major papilla. Nevertheless, a genetic predisposition must be suspected in the case of diagnosis at a younger age. Familial adenomatous polyposis syndrome represents the strongest hereditary predisposition with a 120-fold increased relative risk compared to the general population [5]. Other predisposing genetic syndromes have been described more anecdotally, such as neurofibromatosis type I (not only for somatostatinomas but also for carcinoma) or Muir–Torre syndrome [6].

The precursor lesions can arise from intestinal-type mucosa as well as from pancreatic duct-type ampullary mucosa, and these constitute the two main histological subsets [6]. The intestinal type evolves through a well-known adenoma–carcinoma sequence. The pancreaticobiliary type evolves from precursor pancreatic duct intraepithelial neoplasia. After adenoma, intraepithelial neoplasia (dysplasia and carcinoma in situ) and adenocarcinoma, more unusual histological variants are listed, including mixed-type (glandular and squamous cell components), mucinous (colloid), signet-ring cell carcinomas, neuroendocrine, and undifferentiated carcinomas [6].

Staging of the lesion must be based on the latest TNM classification [7]. Compared to the previous one, the new classification has been modified with regard to extent of the primary tumor and regional lymph node involvement ([Table 1]). This latest classification was evaluated retrospectively in two large patient cohorts [8] [9]. Although the N categories seemed to classify patients correctly, the subcategories for the T stage seemed to be insufficiently precise with no significant differences in recurrence-free survival between T1b and T2 or between T2 and T3a.

Table 1

Pathologic TNM staging of carcinomas of the ampulla of Vater [7].

Primary tumor (pT)

TX: primary tumor cannot be assessed

T0: no evidence of primary tumor

Tis: carcinoma in situ

T1: tumor limited to ampulla of Vater or sphincter of Oddi or tumor invades beyond the sphincter of Oddi (perisphincteric invasion) or into the duodenal submucosa

  • T1a: tumor limited to ampulla of Vater or sphincter of Oddi

  • T1b: tumor invades beyond the sphincter of Oddi (perisphincteric invasion) or into the duodenal submucosa

T2: tumor invades into the muscularis propria of the duodenum

T3: tumor directly invades into the pancreas (up to 0.5 cm) or tumor extends more than 0.5 cm into the pancreas or extends into peripancreatic or periduodenal tissue or duodenal serosa without involvement of the celiac axis or superior mesenteric artery

  • T3a: tumor directly invades the pancreas (up to 0.5 cm)

  • T3b: tumor extends more than 0.5 cm into the pancreas or extends into peripancreatic tissue or periduodenal tissue or duodenal serosa without involvement of the celiac axis or superior mesenteric artery

T4: tumor involves the celiac axis, superior mesenteric artery, or common hepatic artery, irrespective of size

Regional lymph nodes (pN)

NX: regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed

N0: no regional lymph node involvement

N1: metastasis to one to three regional lymph nodes

N2: metastasis to four or more regional lymph nodes

Distant metastasis (pM)

M0: no distant metastasis

M1: distant metastasis

For all stages combined, disease-specific survival at 1 and 5 years is reported to range from 71.7 % to 89 % and from 38.8 % to 47.2 %, respectively [2] [10]. This outcome is significantly better compared with carcinomas located in the duodenum, distal bile duct, and pancreatic head [10]. Tumors presented at stage 1 in up to a third of cases which was one of the most relevant independent factors predictive of survival [2] [11].


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3.2 Diagnostic modalities, endoscopic assessment, and prognostic value

Recommendation

ESGE suggests using the cap-assisted method when the papilla is not seen during forward-viewing endoscopy.

Weak recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends using a side-viewing endoscope when an ampullary tumor is suspected.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

Most noninvasive ampullary tumors of the major papilla are asymptomatic and are detected during conventional upper endoscopy performed for another indication. They can also present with jaundice (16.6 %), pain (14.4 %), pancreatitis (4.1 %), and cholangitis (1 %) [6], and can be associated with common bile duct stones in up to 38 % of cases [12]. Assessment of the lesions may demand expertise; for this reason, in the recent ESGE publication Performance measures for upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, the visualization of the papilla has been formulated as a research priority with regard to quality measures for complete high quality endoscopy [13].

Exploration of the papilla is frequently incomplete when a forward-viewing gastroscope is used because of the tangential angle involved [14] [15]. Cap-assisted esophagogastroduodenoscopy (CA-EGD) has been shown in an RCT crossover study to significantly better visualize the entire major papilla compared with standard gastroscopy (97 % vs. 24 %, P < 0.001) [16]. Two recent prospective noninferiority RCTs comparing CA-EGD and side-viewing duodenoscopy had conflicting results. Abdelhafez et al. [17] found better scores for CA-EGD regarding the examination of mucosal pattern and overall satisfaction but a better periampullary overview score for duodenoscopy. In the second trial the noninferiority of CA-EGD compared to duodenoscopy was not confirmed as the main papilla was completely seen in 68 % versus 86 % of patients, respectively [18]. Therefore cap-assisted EGD can be recommended when the major papilla is not seen by esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) but side-viewing duodenoscopy is recommended for optimal visualization of the papilla and assessment of the feasibility of endoscopic resection.

Papillary tumors can be limited to the ampullary mound, present with an extrapapillary component in 6.9 %–43.8 % of cases, and/or have an intraductal presentation [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24]. Laterally spreading lesions of the papilla may have an extrapapillary component and may have characteristics in common with superficial nonampullary duodenal tumors [23]. There is no validated endoscopic classification of ampullary patterns. In addition, the appearance of benign small ampullary adenomas can be indistinguishable from normal papilla. Regular surface/margins, soft appearance, and mobility can be considered benign features [25]. However, ulceration, firmness, spontaneous bleeding or friability, depressed component, and nonlifting of laterally spreading lesions suggest local invasion [26].

Tumor size may guide therapy and predict endoscopic outcomes, but studies to date have conflicting results. Larger tumor sizes (mainly with a cutoff of 20 mm) have been associated with malignancy [24] [27] [28] or residual disease/recurrence in observational studies [21].

Recommendation

ESGE suggests the use of high resolution virtual chromoendoscopy for endoscopic diagnosis and staging of ampullary tumors.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Dye-based and electronic chromoendoscopy have been proposed to differentiate benign from neoplastic lesions, and also the types of neoplastic lesions. Currently, only data from magnifying narrow band imaging (NBI) have been published that use microsurface and microvessel patterns to guide endoscopic diagnosis. In the context of ampullary tumors, irregular villous arrangement and abnormal microvasculature have presented diagnostic accuracies of 73 % and 90 %, respectively [29] [30]. The concomitant presence of the above NBI features diagnosed adenocarcinoma with sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of 69 %, 100 %, 100 %, 85 %, and 89 %, respectively [30]. Indigo carmine chromoendoscopy and NBI appeared useful in enhancing tumor margins prior to endoscopic papillectomy [31].


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3.3 Histological diagnosis and staging of ampullary tumors

Recommendation

ESGE recommends against diagnostic/therapeutic papillectomy when adenoma has not been proven.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends histological confirmation by endoscopic biopsies in the case of low grade dysplasia adenoma before initiating any treatment.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends follow-up with endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), side-viewing endoscopy, and further sampling with repeated biopsies for an enlarged papilla without clinical or biochemical signs in the case of initial negative histopathology.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests further investigations, at first including endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration/biopsy (EUS-FNA/B) and then limited sphincterotomy with repeated biopsies, when an obstructive ampullary tumor is suspected that has initial negative histopathology.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Endoscopic biopsy and histological examination with routine hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections is regarded as mandatory in the diagnosis of ampullary tumors. Nevertheless, the diagnostic accuracy of preprocedural biopsy has been reported to range from 38.3 % to 85 % [12] [32] [33] [34] [35] [36] [37] which is insufficient to determine appropriate treatment modalities ([Table 2]). The rate of histological underestimation can reach 30 % [19] [32] [37] [39] [40]. The rate of diagnostic overestimation, leading to potentially inadequate and risky treatment, has been prospectively evaluated to be 15 % overall, and 21 % for initial low grade dysplasia diagnosis [19]. Normal intestinal mucosa or inflammatory tissue were found in post-papillectomy histological analysis in 8 % and in 13.8 % in two large retrospective series [37] [41].

Table 2

Accuracy of endoscopic biopsy in preoperative diagnosis of ampullary tumors.

First author, year

Participants, n, Study design

Overall accuracy of endoscopic biopsy, %

Discordance with final results

Kimchi, 1998 [12]

28, Retrospective

85

Yamaguchi, 1990 [32]

78, Retrospective

70

Underestimation 28 %
Overestimation 1.3 %

Rodriguez, 2002 [33]

32, Retrospective

68.7

Menzel, 1999 [34]

40, Retrospective

63

Elek, 2003 [35]

226, Retrospective

69

Grobmyer, 2008 [36]

29, Retrospective

76

Laleman, 2013 [37]

91, Retrospective

38.3

Underestimation 31.9 %
Overestimation 29.8 %

Yamamoto, 2019 [38]

177, Retrospective

81.9

Underestimation 14.1 %
Overestimation 3.9 %

Napoleon, 2014 [19]

93, Prospective

67

Underestimation 23 %
Overestimation 15 %

Li, 2019 [39]

110, Retrospective

68.2

Underestimation 30.9 %
Overestimation 0.9 %

Kim, 2013 [40]

91, Retrospective

53.8

Underestimation 26.4 %
Overestimation 6.5 %

The options to confirm the diagnosis will then depend on clinical (pain, jaundice), biological (cholestasis, pancreatitis), or endoscopically suspicious features. They comprise close follow-up, further sampling, sphincterotomy and further biopsies, EUS-guided tissue acquisition, or papillectomy with a full en bloc pathological specimen. This should be accompanied by close follow-up and further sampling in asymptomatic patients with an enlarged “pseudovillous papilla” as the safety profile of endoscopic biopsies is excellent and repeated histological examination provides a 14 % improvement in diagnosis [35] [42]. In the case of a bulging papilla without abnormality, several reports have suggested that endoscopic biopsies should be done after an endoscopic sphincterotomy. However, conflicting results have been published, with reported low sensitivities of between 21 % and 37 % as post-sphincterotomy changes may produce cytoarchitectural atypia [34] [43] [44]. As a result, a reduction of the diagnostic accuracy was described in patients who benefited from sphincterotomy before sampling (56.25 % vs. 81.25 %) [33]. Taking further samplings at least 10 days after sphincterotomy can be useful to avoid initial false-negative results [45].

Although only a few reports have described EUS-FNA for tumors of the ampulla of Vater, EUS-FNA might be another option when an invasive adenocarcinoma is suspected at EUS [46] [47]. Performance seems to be safe and accurate, with a sensitivity of 82.4 %, a specificity of 100 %, and an accuracy of 88.8 % [46]. If considered, it should be performed before sphincterotomy [47].

Finally, if the diagnosis of a neoplastic benign lesion is proven by histology and suspected malignancy cannot be confirmed by biopsy and/or EUS-FNA, endoscopic papillectomy can be considered as an appropriate diagnostic-therapeutic step if the resection seems feasible and safe [48].

Recommendation

ESGE suggests that, currently, immunohistochemistry (IHC), K-ras and p53 evaluation, polymerase chain reaction, and microsatellite instability testing should not routinely be applied to ampullary tumor biopsies to inform prognosis and/or potential response to treatment.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

IHC is not routinely applied in all ampullary biopsies. The dichotomous classification into intestinal or pancreaticobiliary phenotypes is of significant prognostic value, and IHC panels including MUC1, MUC2, CDX2, CK20 and MUC5AC can be used in resected specimens to aid subtyping [49] [50]. For endoscopic biopsies, however, morphological and IHC classifications into intestinal or pancreaticobiliary phenotypes are inconsistent, owing to tissue heterogeneity and antigenicity, interpretation of staining patterns, and inter-/intraobserver variability. IHC is used to confirm the diagnosis of carcinoma in poorly differentiated/undifferentiated tumors and to distinguish those from nonepithelial malignancies [51]. K-ras and p53 have been found to be mutated in different histological subtypes of ampullary adenocarcinoma and do not allow definitive histological subtyping of intestinal and pancreaticobiliary phenotypes emphasizing the common occurrence of hybrid phenotypes. Wnt-signaling and microsatellite instability testing may become important for informing treatment approaches in the future [52]. Molecular profiling was not found to add significant value to clinicopathological variables in resected specimens [53].

Recommendation

ESGE recommends endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) and abdominal magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) for staging of ampullary tumors.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests that intraductal ultrasound (IDUS) can be useful in selected patients with ampullary tumors; however, routine use must be balanced against training, costs, and risk of pancreatitis.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Transabdominal ultrasound, computed tomography (CT), MRCP, EUS, duodenoscopy, and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) with intraductal ultrasound (IDUS) have all been used for detection and staging of ampullary tumors [54] [55] [56] [57] [58] [59] [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66] [67] [68] [69] [70] [71] [72].

The performance of EUS was evaluated in a meta-analysis that included 422 patients from 14 studies [70]. The pooled sensitivity and specificity of EUS were 77 % (95 %CI 69 %–83 %) and 78 % (95 %CI 72 %–84 %), respectively, for T1 tumors. The pooled sensitivity and specificity of morphological criteria for lymph node involvement were 70 % (95 %CI 62 %–77 %) and 74 % (95 %CI 67 %–80 %), respectively. An overall moderate strength of agreement with histopathology in preoperative staging was concluded, but EUS has been shown to have higher detection accuracy for ampullary tumors in comparative studies. EUS provides significantly higher performance especially for T staging compared with CT and transabdominal ultrasound, and comparable or slightly but not significantly higher accuracy compared with MRCP [54] [55] [62] [64] [65] [66] [67] [68]. For N staging, MRCP had the best performance, but the difference was not significant as compared to EUS and CT [60] [66] [68] [71]. The sensitivity of EUS for malignant lymph node diagnosis was statistically superior to that of CT [72]. Finally, EUS and MRCP appear to be reproducible and safe techniques for determining the presence of a pancreas divisum which modifies the endoscopic papillectomy technique for tumors of the major papilla [73].

IDUS for T-staging in ampullary tumors has been reported to have overall accuracies between 78 % and 90.2 % [34] [60] [71] [74] [75] [76]. Ito et al., in a prospective study of 40 patients who underwent IDUS before surgery (n = 30) or endoscopic papillectomy (n = 10), reported an accuracy in T-staging of 78 % overall and of 100 % for those who underwent endoscopic papillectomy [74]. Ductal infiltration was correctly assessed in 90 % of cases in both biliary and pancreatic ducts. In another retrospective study including 72 patients with suspected ampullary tumors, IDUS had sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for the diagnosis of ampullary carcinoma of 87.5 %, 92.5 % and 90.2 %, respectively [75]. Most reports suggest that IDUS has diagnostic yields that are slightly higher than or comparable to those of EUS [34] [77], and should be combined with other diagnostic modalities such as forceps biopsy [77]. In addition, IDUS could also be useful to guide direct tissue acquisition by biopsy or brush cytology. However, there is a risk of post-ERCP pancreatitis and the specific morphological criteria predicting malignancy in these patients are unclear.


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4 Treatment of ampullary tumors (see [Fig. 1])

4.1 Endoscopic and surgical approaches

Recommendation

ESGE recommends endoscopic papillectomy in patients with ampullary adenoma without intraductal extension, because of good results regarding outcomes (technical and clinical success, morbidity, and recurrence).

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends en bloc resection of ampullary adenomas up to 20–30 mm in diameter to achieve R0 resection, for optimizing the complete resection rate, providing optimal histopathology, and reduction of the recurrence rate after endoscopic papillectomy.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests considering surgical treatment of ampullary adenomas when endoscopic resection is not feasible for technical reasons (e. g. diverticulum, size > 4 cm), and in the case of intraductal involvement (of > 20 mm). Surveillance thereafter is still mandatory.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

The initial case series that reported the outcomes of endoscopic papillectomy were quite small and included favorable outcomes in benign lesions and lesions without intraductal growth [25] [78] [79] [80] [81]. The results of subsequent studies included patients with adenocarcinoma (initially diagnosed with ampullary adenoma on preprocedural work-up but with adenocarcinoma revealed in post-procedural histology) with an adverse event rate similar to that in previous studies [21] [37] [82] [83] [84] [85] [86] [87].

Based on these studies, a systematic review with pooled analysis was published in 2020 by Spadaccini et al., that included 29 studies reporting the results of endoscopic papillectomy in a total of 1751 patients [26]. The overall adverse event rate was 24.9 % (95 %CI 21.2 %–29.0 %; I 2 = 66 %). The most common adverse events reported after endoscopic papillectomy were post-procedural pancreatitis in 11.9 % (95 %CI 10.4–13.6; I 2 = 41 %), followed by bleeding in 10.6 % (95 %CI 5.2–13.6; I 2 = 61 %). Perforations and cholangitis were reported in 3.1 % (95 %CI 2.2–4.2; I 2 = 17 %) and 2.7 % (95 %CI 1.9–4.0; I 2 = 32 %), respectively. The long-term adverse effect of papillary stenosis occurred in 2.4 % (95 %CI 1.6–3.4; I 2 = 0). Mortality was 0.3 %. Complete endoscopic resection (technical success defined as the absence of any adenomatous remnant from the resection margins at the end of the procedure) was achieved in 94.2 % (95 %CI 90.5–96.5; I 2 = 73 %), and curative endoscopic resection (oncologic success defined as the absence of any histological features which predict locoregional persistence) in 87.1 % (95 %CI 83.0–90.3; I 2 = 70 %). En bloc resection was achieved in 82.4 % (95 %CI 74.7–88.1; I 2 = 84 %), and this was the only factor affecting curative resection (odds ratio [OR] 3.55, 95 %CI 1.11–5.99, P = 0.004). In one of the largest retrospective series on endoscopic papillectomy, en bloc resection was significantly associated with a higher complete resection rate compared to piecemeal resection (OR 4.05, 95 %CI 1.71–9.59, P < 0.001) [85]. A summary of the more recently published results is provided in [Table 3].

Table 3

Outcomes of endoscopic papillectomy: summary of recently published results.

First author, year

Participants, n,
Study design

Outcomes, n/n (%)

En bloc resection

Clinical success[*]

Overall morbidity

Recurrence

Spadaccini, 2020 [26]

1751,
Systematic review

763/926
(82.4 %)

1384/1589
(87.1 %)

407/1751
(24.9 %)

157/1331
(11.8 %)

Li, 2019 [39]

110,
Retrospective cohort

83/110
(75.5 %)

86/110
(78.2 %)

39/110
(35 %)

13/110
(11.8 %)

Yamamoto, 2019 [38]

177,
Retrospective cohort

76/177
(42.9 %)

0 %

Sahar, 2020 [88]

161,
Retrospective cohort

115/161
(72 %)

106/128
(83 %)

24/161
(14.9 %)

12/161
(7 %)

Tringali, 2020 [89]

135,
Retrospective cohort

112/135
(83 %)

96/103
(93 %)

29/135
(21.5 %)

24/103
(23 %)

van der Wiel, 2019 [20]

87,
Retrospective cohort

41/87
(47.1 %)

67/87
(77 %)

23/87
(26.4 %)

10/87
(11.5 %)

Lee, 2020 [90]

53,
Retrospective cohort

30/53
(56.6 %)

41/45
(91.1 %)

10/53
(18.9 %)

16/53
(32.7 %)

Total

1144/1472
(77.7 %)

1780/2062
(86.3 %)

608/2474
(24.6 %)

232/1845
(12.6 %)

* Clinical success was defined as disease-free survival after endoscopic treatment alone at the end of the follow-up.


No well-designed, prospective studies comparing endoscopic papillectomy and surgical treatment (transduodenal ampullectomy or pancreaticoduodenectomy) of ampullary tumors are available. As endoscopic papillectomy is increasingly performed, surgical excision seems to be used less frequently. However, surgical transduodenal ampullectomy is still an acceptable option for ampullary adenoma, being preferred to endoscopic papillectomy in the following settings: intraductal involvement; impossibility of performing endoscopic papillectomy for technical reasons (e. g. diverticulum, size > 4 cm); incomplete resection after endoscopic papillectomy with positive margins; and local recurrence not treatable by endoscopy [91] [92]. A comparative systematic review including 5 studies on ampullary tumors showed that surgical resection (transduodenal ampullectomy or pancreaticoduodenectomy) had more favorable results in terms of complete cure of adenoma compared to endoscopic papillectomy (risk difference [RD] –0.37, 95 %CI –0.50 to –0.24, P < 0.001, I 2 = 71 %) and showed no differences in terms of complications [93]. Nevertheless, in the fixed-effects model, endoscopic papillectomy showed a lower rate of adverse events (RD –0.28, 95 %CI –0.39 to –0.18, P < 0.001; I 2 = 95 %). Two additional retrospective comparative studies, not included in the abovementioned meta-analysis, that involved a total of 139 patients with suspected benign ampullary tumors who underwent endoscopic papillectomy and transduodenal ampullectomy, confirmed a higher morbidity in the surgical groups compared to the endoscopic papillectomy groups (Ceppa et al. [94], 109 patients, 42 % vs. 18 %, P = 0.006; Dubois et al. [95], 30 patients, 68 % vs. 9 %, P = 0.002). Finally, a third study, including 66 patients with benign and malignant ampullary tumors (≤ T1) treated by local resection either by endoscopic papillectomy or transduodenal ampullectomy, revealed higher rates of adverse events (10 % vs. 35 %) but lower R1 resection rates (30 % vs. 0 %) for transduodenal ampullectomy [91]. Nevertheless, in most of these retrospective series, more advanced disease was noted in the patients treated by surgery, thus interpretation of their findings must be uncertain. A series from Sauvanet et al. [96] even showed the possibility of complete excision of ampullary tumors with intraductal growth (25–70 mm), by combining transduodenal ampullectomy with complete common bile duct excision in 7 patients.

It is important to underline that for both endoscopic papillectomy and transduodenal ampullectomy, operator and center experience are crucial to ensure good outcomes and low morbidity rates [91].

If en bloc endoscopic resection could be technically feasible for tumors up to 3 cm, and surgical treatment is indicated for tumors > 4 cm, the management of patients with ampullary tumors sized between 3 and 4 cm should be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends that a laterally spreading tumor involving the papilla (LST-p) can be managed by endoscopic resection, but the higher risk of intraprocedural and delayed bleeding should be taken into consideration.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

A laterally spreading tumor involving the papilla Vateri (LST-p) is defined as a laterally spreading ampullary tumor with a ≥ 10-mm extension beyond the ampullary mound [23] or with an extrapapillary component, involving the duodenal wall, that is greater than the size of the papillary adenoma [88]. Endoscopic treatment of LST-p showed comparable outcomes regarding endoscopic curative resection and recurrence rate to those for adenoma confined to the ampulla, in four retrospective cohorts including a total of 509 patients and 110 LST-p [20] [23] [88] [97]. In the study from Klein et al. [23] a higher risk of intraprocedural bleeding was reported (50 % vs. 24.7 %, P = 0.003) as well as delayed bleeding (25 % vs. 12.3 %, P = 0.08) with LST-p. Similar results were obtained by Sahar et al. [88] for the adverse event of delayed bleeding (14 % vs. 4 %, P = 0.02). Nevertheless, before generalizing these results, it should be underlined that data are still limited and coming from referral centers only.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends pancreaticoduodenectomy (including lymphadenectomy) for malignant lesions of the ampulla of stage T1 or higher. This recommendation also applies if pathology results following an endoscopic papillectomy or surgical transduodenal ampullectomy reveal ampullary T1 adenocarcinoma.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends for Tis ampullary cancer that transduodenal ampullectomy or endoscopic papillectomy might be considered to be sufficient when final pathology results show no residual disease.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

There are no RCTs to compare the different surgical options for ampullary carcinoma. Most series from the literature are retrospective. The standard procedure for ampullary cancer is pancreaticoduodenectomy, which is associated with postoperative morbidity of 34 %–59 % and mortality of 1 %–2 %, with 5-year survival rates after resection varying between 40 % and 60 %. The most important prognostic factors for survival are T and N status [27] [98] [99].

Some authors advocate for less invasive procedures for early-stage adenocarcinomas. It is important to distinguish Tis from T1 adenocarcinoma [27]. Tis carcinomas are mucosal tumors not invading the lamina propria and muscularis mucosae, which do not seem to show lymphatic invasion or lymph node involvement [94] [100] [101].

In recent years several observational studies have been published that report potentially oncologically safe results in cases of endoscopic papillectomy performed on well-differentiated intramucosal adenocarcinoma (T1a/Du0) with no lymphatic, vascular, or perineural invasion, and without lymph node involvement [19] [38] [39] [102] [103] [104] [105].

For Tis ampullary lesions, local transduodenal ampullectomy shows lower morbidity rates than pancreaticoduodenectomy and no risk for recurrence [100] [101] [106] [107]. Published long-term outcomes are scarce but one study by Gao et al. [106] showed 5-year survival rates following transduodenal ampullectomy of 100 % for 4 patients with Tis lesions and 72.2 % for 18 patients with T1 adenocarcinoma (P = 0.928).

On the other hand, a significant percentage of T1 ampullary carcinomas have lymph node metastasis, with rates varying from 9 % to 45 % [27] [98] [100] [107] [108]. Consequently, there is a risk of incomplete resection when transduodenal ampullectomy is performed for T1 adenocarcinoma [109]. During transduodenal ampullectomy, the ampullary tumor is resected by dissection through the mucosal plane; the action is pushed as far as possible along the ducts to obtain an R0 resection [91]. It is recommended to perform appropriate frozen-section pathological examination during or after transduodenal ampullectomy. If the results do not fulfill the potential local resection criteria, the operation should be converted to pancreaticoduodenectomy [106]. Consequently, pancreaticoduodenectomy with lymphadenectomy is still the procedure of choice for T1 adenocarcinoma.


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4.2 Preoperative and palliative biliary drainage for ampullary tumors

Recommendation

ESGE recommends ERCP with self-expandable metal stent (SEMS) insertion in patients with ampullary tumors and biliary obstruction in palliative settings.

Strong recommendation, high quality evidence.

An ESGE Guideline, updated in 2017, recommends treatment of malignant extrahepatic biliary obstruction by means of stenting rather than by surgery [110]. No additional high quality evidence has been published since 2017.

ERCP-guided biliary drainage is preferred over the percutaneous transhepatic route because of fewer adverse events, shorter hospital stay, lower costs, and lack of external drainage catheters, based on an analysis of a national database [111]. Since that study, a meta-analysis has been published that included all types of biliary tract/gallbladder cancer, in both resectable and unresectable settings [112]. This has shown that ERCP-guided biliary drainage and percutaneous transhepatic access have similar rates for success and overall adverse events, but that the type of adverse event differs. It was concluded that the approach should be chosen on the basis of tumor location and purpose of drainage [112]. For palliative drainage in patients with ampullary tumors, ESGE recommends ERCP-guided biliary drainage as the preferred route [110].

Several meta-analyses have shown endoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary drainage (EUS-BD) to be a safe and effective option after failed ERCP-guided biliary drainage [113] [114] [115]. Recently, the choice between EUS-BD versus ERCP-guided biliary drainage as the primary modality in malignant bile duct obstruction has been analyzed in eight meta-analyses [116] [117] [118] [119] [120] [121] [122] [123]. Technical success (around 92 %–97 %) and clinical success (around 85 %–96 %) were high for both EUS- and ERCP-guided biliary drainage, and did not differ between approaches. Total adverse events rates were similar, but EUS-BD showed lower rates of post-procedural pancreatitis. The meta-analyses reported stent dysfunction, tumor ingrowth, and re-interventions to be similar between approaches or in favor of EUS-BD. These data are promising, but the series are small and it is difficult to generalize from the data because the trials were performed in high-volume expert-center settings. In selected cases (e. g. difficult anatomy), EUS-BD might be considered as the primary approach in expert centers.

The 2017 ESGE Guideline recommends SEMSs in preference to plastic stents for endoscopic biliary drainage of malignant obstruction [110]. Since the Guideline’s publication, this has been further supported by the single RCT and single meta-analysis that have been published [124] [125].

Whether a covered or uncovered SEMS should be used remains debatable. Since the 2017 ESGE Guideline, one meta-analysis [126] and two RCTs [127] [128] have been published on this topic. Tringali et al. included 11 RCTs in their meta-analysis and showed a nonsignificant risk reduction for stent failure of about 32 % in favor of covered over uncovered SEMS, with no difference in adverse events [126]. Stent migration, tumor overgrowth, and sludge formation occurred more frequently in covered SEMS, but tumor ingrowth was less common. In contrast, a recent RCT published since the above meta-analysis, showed significantly better patency rates in favor of uncovered SEMS [127], and a second (studying uncovered vs. covered SEMSs with percutaneous transhepatic route after failed ERCP, and therefore a somewhat different patient population) found no difference [128]. In conclusion, from the current literature, based on studies including patients with all causes of malignant biliary obstruction (the majority with pancreatic cancer and only a minority with ampullary tumors), there is no convincing evidence for the preferential use of covered or uncovered SEMSs.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends against routine preoperative biliary drainage in patients with ampullary cancer who are eligible for surgery; preoperative biliary drainage should be reserved for patients with cholangitis, severe symptomatic jaundice (e.g, intense pruritus), or delayed surgery, or for before neoadjuvant chemotherapy in jaundiced patients.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

Recommendation

In cases where preoperative biliary drainage is required, ESGE recommends endoscopic biliary drainage with endoscopic SEMS insertion.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

The 2017 ESGE Guideline recommends against routine preoperative biliary drainage in patients with malignant extrahepatic biliary obstruction [110]; A recent systematic review, published after that Guideline and including 32 studies, confirmed that refraining from preoperative drainage before pancreaticoduodenectomy may be the best management for jaundice in patients with resectable pancreatic head cancer [129]. If we focus on studies including only patients with resectable adenocarcinoma, a retrospective series including 64 patients concluded that preoperative drainage was an independent negative predictive factor influencing survival (drainage vs. no drainage, 25.3 months vs. 112.9 months, P < 0.001) [130]. Similarly, a French retrospective series including 135 patients with nonductal periampullary tumors identified preoperative drainage as a predictive factor for recurrence [131]. Finally, similar results were reported by a very large Asian study (n = 899) [132].

If preoperative drainage is necessary, the same ESGE Guideline recommends the endoscopic over the percutaneous transhepatic route, based on long-term follow-up showing longer patient survival and less frequent peritoneal/liver recurrence in the endoscopic groups [133] [134] [135]. An additional recent meta-analysis confirmed a lower risk of seeding with endoscopic compared to percutaneous drainage [136]. Furthermore, if preoperative drainage is required, the use of a SEMS is favored over a plastic stent, based on the results of two meta-analyses. These concluded that SEMSs were associated with lower rates of endoscopic re-intervention and perioperative cholangitis, despite potentially higher risk of preoperative biliary drainage-related pancreatitis due to SEMS [137] [138].

Finally, EUS-BD has been proposed as an alternative approach in the case of failed ERCP [115] and even as a first-line approach [116]. Nevertheless, the majority of patients included in these trials underwent palliative drainage, without subsequent surgical resection. Therefore, the place of preoperative EUS-BD is still unclear, as well as the possible consequences for the outcome of the surgical procedure.


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4.3 Treatment of intraductal extension

Recommendation

ESGE suggests the use, in expert centers, of complementary techniques (thermal ablation by cystotome, or radiofrequency ablation [RFA]) with temporary biliary stenting, for ampullary adenoma with ≤ 20-mm intraductal extension.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Patients with ampullary adenomas and extensive intraductal involvement are usually referred for surgical therapy. Several studies have been published that report unfavorable outcomes for endoscopic treatment (curative endoscopic resection achieved in 0–9 %, depending on the study) [20] [85] [86] [139]. Bohnacker et al. [140] reported a lower rate of endoscopic curative resection (46 % vs. 83 %, P < 0.001) and a higher rate of rescue surgery (37 % vs. 12 %) in cases of intraductal growth.

Nevertheless, two endoscopic complementary destruction techniques are available and have recently been evaluated. Pérez-Cuadrado-Robles et al. [24] proposed the use of endoscopic thermal ablation by a wire-guided cystotome combined with endoscopic papillectomy (73 patients overall including 18 with ≤ 20-mm intraductal extension). No difference in curative resection rates was observed after a mean follow-up of 20 months (100 % for patients with intraductal extension vs. 80.3 % for those without; P = 0.093).

Two retrospective studies including 4 and 13 patients with intraductal growth in the common bile duct revealed successful treatment using RFA in 75 % and 92.3 %, respectively, in 1–5 sessions [141] [142]. A recent RCT, including 20 patients with histologically proven endobiliary adenoma remnant (ductal extent < 20 mm) after endoscopic papillectomy for ampullary adenoma, concluded that intraductal RFA can lead to a 70 % dysplasia eradication at 12 months after a single session [143]. More severe histopathological level (high grade dysplasia) was a predictive factor for poor outcome requiring rescue surgery in 2 patients (10 %) [143]. Biliary stricture, requiring temporary biliary stenting, is common after RFA for intraductal extension (7/33, i.e., 21.2 % of patients in the last two retrospective series) [142] [143].


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5 Technical considerations in endoscopic papillectomy

Recommendation

ESGE recommends direct snare resection without submucosal injection for endoscopic papillectomy.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

Some authors have recommended submucosal injection of ampullary tumors prior to resection, for the diagnostic purpose of facilitating the delineation of the lateral extent of the lesion and, if the nonlifting sign is present, as an indicator of a deep invasive lesion that is not amenable to endoscopic resection [144]. The prevention of bleeding and of deep thermal injury to the ducts and muscle layer are also invoked as reasons for submucosal injection [145]. Other authors do not perform injection: first because the center of the ampullary lesion is tethered down by the biliary and pancreatic ducts, and it may not lift; secondly, injection may create a “dome” effect and make effective snare placement for en bloc resection more difficult; and thirdly, there are reports of increased risk of post-resection pancreatitis.

Currently few clinical data exist to support or refute the abovementioned statements [19] [25] [79] [80] [85] [86] [145] [146] [147] [148] [149] [150] [151] [152] [153] [154]. In a survey answered by 46 expert biliary endoscopists in the USA and Canada, only 12 % responded that they always utilized submucosal injection in combination with endoscopic papillectomy in order to “decrease the depth of thermal injury to the duodenal wall” [155]. Only one RCT has compared endoscopic papillectomy with or without submucosal injection; it included 50 patients with biopsy-proven adenomas (26 snare-only, 24 injection plus snare) [156]. The complete resection rate was significantly higher in the no-injection compared to the with-injection group (80.8 % [21/26] and 50.0 % [12/24], respectively; P = 0.02). There was no difference in terms of complications, residual tumor at 1 month and recurrence rates at 12 months. In a retrospective study with propensity-score matching (25 paired patients), residual tumor was found more often when submucosal injection was used compared with the simple snare technique only [157]. In conclusion, the use of submucosal injection does not seem to bring any advantage.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests to avoid any biliary, pancreatic, or biductal sphincterotomy prior to endoscopic papillectomy.

Weak recommendation, very low quality evidence.

Despite the lack of clear evidence from comparative trials, many authors recommend obtaining a cholangiogram and pancreatogram prior to endoscopic papillectomy, to rule out deep intraductal extension of more than 10 mm. However, limited data exist as to whether prior biductal sphincterotomy has an impact on the post-resection cannulation rate, pancreatic stent placement, and the outcomes of the subsequent papillectomy [21] [25] [79] [80] [85] [86] [145] [146] [147] [148] [149] [150] [151] [152] [153]. In one retrospective study [145], technical and clinical success rates after routine use of biductal sphincterotomy prior to resection were reported to be comparable to other larger trials using the standard technique, with a low adverse event rate of 8 % [19] [21] [79] [80] [85] [86] [145] [148] [151] [153]. Remarkably the number of en bloc and single-session resections seems to be lower, in particular when sphincterotomy is combined with pancreatic stent placement prior to resection, necessitating more treatment sessions and additional ablative techniques, such as argon plasma coagulation (APC), to achieve local complete remission [145]. Furthermore, some authors report difficulties in obtaining complete histopathological evaluation of the resected specimen because of the thermal injury following sphincterotomy [149] [158]. One author group reported increased risk of adverse events (perforation, bleeding, and tumor cell seeding) [158].

Recommendation

ESGE recommends performing submucosal injection prior to resection of laterally spreading duodenal ampullary tumors to allow safe and effective endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR), in line with the resection technique for epithelial nonampullary duodenal lesions.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

When there is extrapapillary extension of the adenoma to the adjacent duodenal wall, submucosal injection to that region is recommended, in line with the recommendations for EMRs in the gastrointestinal tract [23] [146] [147] [149] [159] [160] [161] [162] [163] [164] [165] [166] [167]. Submucosal injection separates the mucosa from the muscularis propria layer, and creates a safe plane for endoscopic resection.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests the use of endocut current for endoscopic papillectomy, to reduce intraprocedural and early post-procedural bleeding.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Currently there is no consensus regarding the optimal current and power output for endoscopic papillectomy. Some authors advocate the use of pure cutting current to avoid edema caused by the coagulation mode [25] [148], although a pure cutting current has been reported to be associated with bleeding. Others prefer using a blended electrosurgical current [80] [86] or alternating cut/coagulation modes [21] [158]. A systematic review of non-RCTs did not demonstrate superiority of one modality over the other [168]. In a retrospective case–control trial focusing on adverse events with respect to technical modifications of papillectomy, the use of endocut instead of pure cutting current resulted in a significant reduction of early bleeding without any consequence observed in terms of cannulation rate of the pancreatic orifice and post-ERCP pancreatitis rate [154]. Iwasaki et al. [169] in an RCT demonstrated that although both pure cutting current (autocut mode) and blended cutting current (endocut mode) have similar efficacy and safety for endoscopic papillectomy, the endocut mode may prevent immediate bleeding in cases with large tumor sizes. In this study, 60 patients were enrolled over a 2-year period. The incidences of delayed bleeding (13.3 % vs. 16.7 %, P = 1.00) and pancreatitis (27 % vs. 30 %, P = 0.77) were similar in the two groups. The rate of crush artefacts was higher in the endocut than in the autocut group (27 % vs. 3.3 %, P = 0.03). Immediate bleeding when tumors greater than 14 mm in diameter were resected was more common in the autocut than in the endocut group (88 % vs. 46 %, P = 0.04) [169].

Recommendation

ESGE suggests to perform biliary sphincterotomy and/or stenting after endoscopic papillectomy in cases of delayed biliary drainage, intraprocedural bleeding or high risk of early post-procedural bleeding, and intraductal extension of the neoplasm treated or not by complementary techniques.

Weak recommendation, very low quality evidence.

The use of biliary sphincterotomy varies in different retrospective trials, from being performed in the absence of free bile flow from the ostium after endoscopic papillectomy to routine performance [21] [25] [80] [86] [148]. Usually the rate of post-endoscopic papillectomy cholangitis is very low [170]. However, in a retrospective case–control trial with procedure-related complications as the primary endpoint, the routine use of biliary sphincterotomy and stenting was associated with a lower rate of post-endoscopic papillectomy cholangitis, at 0 % compared to 25 % (although data about antibiotic prophylaxis were lacking) [154]. In the case of distal biliary intraductal growth that is possibly amenable to endoscopic resection, a maximum sphincterotomy can be performed to allow for complete resection using a smaller snare or an extraction balloon [147] [148] [171].


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6 Prevention and management of adverse events after endoscopic papillectomy

Recommendation

ESGE recommends that the decision for prophylactic endoscopic hemostasis and the type of technique should be individualized.

Strong recommendation, very low quality evidence.

The role of prophylactic hemostasis was addressed in a retrospective comparative study with propensity matching [172] that evaluated the impact of adjunctive APC after endoscopic papillectomy on the risk of delayed bleeding. The delayed bleeding rate was significantly lower in the APC group compared to the non-APC group (7.3 % vs. 31.7 %, OR 0.180, P < 0.01). However, there are conflicting data: a recent RCT including 54 patients failed to find any reduction in the rate of delayed post-papillectomy bleeding with APC (30.8 % in the prophylactic APC group vs. 21.4 % in the non-APC group; P = 0.434) [173]. Ismail et al. [153] reported retrospectively that bleeding occurred post-papillectomy in 11/61 (18 %) despite prophylactic APC having been performed in 10/11 of those who bled. Prophylactic clip application with closure of the frenulum has been proposed in small prospective case series to prevent delayed bleeding but data from larger and comparative studies are lacking [174]. An RCT by Hyun et al. that included 50 patients [156] reported that there was no difference in rate of post-papillectomy bleeding (early or delayed) when simple snare papillectomy was compared to papillectomy after submucosal injection of epinephrine (42.3 % [11/26] vs. 45.8 % [11/24], respectively; P = 0.80).

Recommendation

ESGE suggests routine rectal administration of 100 mg of diclofenac or indomethacin immediately before endoscopic papillectomy in all patients without contraindication to administration of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends prophylactic pancreatic duct stenting to reduce the risk of pancreatitis after endoscopic papillectomy.

Strong recommendation, moderate quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests, when prophylactic pancreatic duct stenting is not possible after endoscopic papillectomy, that other alternatives such as high volume hydration using lactated Ringer’s solution can be considered in order to reduce the risk of post-ERCP pancreatitis.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

Only prophylactic pancreatic duct stenting has been studied as a technique for prevention of pancreatitis after endoscopic papillectomy. The basis for this use is to prevent transient edema of the pancreatic orifice and occlusion from the effect of cautery, and to allow continued pancreatic duct drainage. One RCT with a sample size of only 19 patients has shown a significantly higher rate of pancreatitis in the unstented group (33 %) compared to none in the stented group (P = 0.02) [175]. A systematic review of 23 retrospective cohort studies demonstrated a statistically nonsignificant reduction in the rate of post-papillectomy pancreatitis (OR 0.71, 95 %CI 0.36–1.40; P = 0.325) [176]. The meta-analysis of Spadaccini et al. [26] has shown that the only factor affecting acute pancreatitis as an outcome was same-session prophylactic pancreatic stent placement (OR –1.72, 95 %CI –2.95 to –0.50; P = 0.006).

Endoscopic papillectomy would involve ERCP, in addition to snare resection of the major papilla. The direct impact of prophylactic measures against post-ERCP pancreatitis have not been evaluated, by extrapolation, to the case of endoscopic papillectomy. Nevertheless, meta-analyses that include RCTs have shown that pancreatic duct stenting [177], rectal nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs [178], high volume peri-ERCP hydration [179], intravenous somatostatin [180], and sublingual glyceryl trinitrate [181] all reduce the incidence of post-ERCP pancreatitis. In the updated ESGE Guideline on ERCP-related adverse events, pancreatic duct stenting, rectal nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and high volume hydration were recommended as measures for prophylaxis of post-ERCP pancreatitis [182]. In a secondary analysis of RCTs, failed pancreatic stent placement appeared to confer an increased risk of post-ERCP pancreatitis but this was attenuated by rectal indomethacin administration [183].

The presence of a pancreas divisum, which must be documented during the preoperative EUS and/or MRCP, avoids pancreatic stent placement, but should not be considered to be a substitute for prophylactic medical measures.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends standard techniques for endoscopic hemostasis, such as epinephrine injection, electrocoagulation, endoscopic clip placement, noncontact hemostatic techniques, and argon plasma coagulation, for treatment of post-papillectomy bleeding.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends consideration of angiographic embolization in the case of massive bleeding unresponsive to endoscopic therapy.

Strong recommendation, very low quality evidence.

In their abovementioned meta-analysis, Spadaccini et al. [26] revealed a pooled rate of post-papillectomy bleeding of 10.6 % (95 %CI 5.2 %–13.6 %; I 2 = 61 %), with effective conservative management including endoscopic treatment for 149/156 events (95.5 %) for which data were available. In the more recent and largest retrospective studies, endoscopic treatments were performed in 69.1 % of cases (n = 56/81) and mostly successfully [20] [39] [41] [88] [89]. Reported endoscopic techniques included epinephrine injection, electrocoagulation, clip application, and APC. In cases of endoscopic failure, patients underwent angiographic evaluation and embolization in 12 cases and in 1 a salvage surgery [20] [26] [39] [41] [88] [89]. One retrospective study reported the successful use of fibrin glue to achieve endoscopic hemostasis in refractory bleeding in 6 patients (3 post-papillectomy and 3 post-papillotomy) [184]. No comparative study is available, precluding the application of one technique in preference to another.


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7 Follow-up after endoscopic papillectomy

Recommendation

ESGE recommends long-term monitoring of patients after endoscopic papillectomy or surgical ampullectomy, based on duodenoscopy with biopsies of the scar and of any abnormal area, within the first 3 months, at 6 and 12 months, and thereafter yearly for at least 5 years.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

No comparative study has analyzed the different strategies and procedures proposed for follow-up after endoscopic papillectomy.

The surveillance is usually based on duodenoscopy with biopsies taken from the scar and any abnormal area [23]. Rarely, EUS, CT, and blood sampling have been performed in some series, without any clear superiority found compared with simple endoscopic monitoring [19] [103] [185]. EUS was performed systematically in one prospective series but did not facilitate highlighting recurrence [19]. In one single-center retrospective study, virtual chromoendoscopy (NBI) was compared to pathological information provided by biopsies and showed an interesting diagnostic performance (sensitivity 89 %, specificity 97 %, and negative predictive value 97 %) [23]. MRCP accuracy has not, to date, been evaluated during follow-up after endoscopic papillectomy.

Follow-up interval times commonly include a first endoscopic session within 3 months (mainly 4–8 weeks) to allow retrieval of the prophylactic pancreatic stent [19] [20] [37] [39] [41] [88] [89] [103] [105] [140] [185]. Further sessions are scheduled at 6-month intervals for the first year and yearly thereafter for up to 3 to 5 years. With this schema, the recurrence rate after endoscopic papillectomy was reported as 11.8 % (95 %CI 8.4–16.5) in a recent literature review (23 studies, 1130 patients, follow-up 9.6–84.5 months) [26], and the median time to recurrence as 14.2 months (range 6–27) in another one including 967 patients [37]. This median period seems to be shorter in the case of adenoma confined to the papilla (9.2 months, interquartile range [IQR] 4.2–25.7) compared with LST-p (13.1 months, IQR 4.6–33.1) [20]. Furthermore, up to two thirds of recurrences are observed at the first follow-up session [39] [41]. On the other hand, a small number of patients developed delayed recurrence and adenocarcinoma after 5 years, warranting long-term and indefinite monitoring [20] [85] [89]. Finally, the vast majority of recurrences were benign and no interval cancer was described in the available literature in the setting of a well-established monitoring protocol.

Recommendation

ESGE recommends, in the case of recurrence after endoscopic papillectomy, careful assessment of local tumoral extent using endoscopic examination and biopsies, and EUS and MRCP investigations before any treatment.

Strong recommendation, low quality evidence.

Recommendation

ESGE suggests that benign residual or recurrent lesions could be effectively managed by endoscopic treatment including ablative techniques (APC) and EMR.

Weak recommendation, low quality evidence.

The endoscopic management of post-papillectomy recurrence appears to be effective. In a systematic review, Spadaccini et al. [26] showed a substantial group of patients with recurrence who underwent further endoscopic management leading to oncological cure in 80.9 % (95 %CI 73 %–87 %; pooled percentage) of cases (oncological cure was defined as complete excision regardless of number of sessions and of detection of recurrence if this had been amenable to endoscopic treatment). In recent large retrospective series, the efficacy of endoscopic re-treatment after residual or recurring lesions varied from 38 % to 100 %, with several sessions being required [39] [41] [88] [89] [185]. Tringali et al. [89] obtained successful outcomes among 39 patients treated by EMR for residual or recurrent disease. Ablative treatment using APC has shown also interesting results [39] [88] [89] [185].

However, an increased rate of pancreatitis after APC for residual or recurrent disease has been found in some studies, prompting discussion of preventive measures such as pancreatic duct stenting [140].

Pancreatic stenting and biliary stenting could contribute to minimizing the risk of further stricture of the biliary or pancreatic orifice. The use of APC seems to have no impact on post-papillectomy duct stricture rate since patients systematically received pancreatic and/or biliary stenting if required [172].


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Disclaimer

The legal disclaimer for ESGE guidelines [186] applies to this Guideline.


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Competing interests

M. Arvanitakis has received lecture fees from Olympus. T. Beyna provides consultancy to and gives lectures for Boston Scientific and Cook Medical (ongoing). J.E. van Hooft’s department has received research grants from Cook Medical (from 2014 to 2019) and Abbott (from 2014 to 2017); she has received lecture fees from Medtronics (from 2014 to 2015, 2019) and Cook Medical (from 2019); she has received consultancy fees from Boston Scientific (from 2014 to 2017). G. Vanbiervliet has provided consultancy to Boston Scientific and Cook Medical (both from 2019 to present). A. Aelvoet, U. Arnelo, M. Barthet, O. Busch, P. Deprez, A. Larghi, G. Manes, A. Moss, B. Napoleon, M. Nayar,E. Pérez-Cuadrado-Robles, L. Kunovsky, S. Seewald, and M. Strijker, declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

ESGE wishes to thank, for the added value they have brought to the final manuscript, the two external reviewers, Professor Schalk van der Merwe of the University Hospital-Gasthuisberg, University of Leuven, Belgium, and Dr. Udayakumar Navaneethan, Digestive Health Institute, Orlando, Florida, USA, and also Drs. Khalil Bedran, St George Hospital University Medical Center, Beirut, Lebanon, Marco Bustamente-Balén, La Fe University Hospital, Valencia, Spain, Gertran Rasschaert, Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussels, Belgium, and Suzane Ribeiro, Ghent University Hospital, Belgium for their comments.

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Corresponding author

Geoffroy Vanbiervliet, MD PhD
Endoscopie Digestive
Hôpital L’Archet 2, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice
151 Route de Saint Antoine de Ginestière
CS 23079
06202 Nice Cedex 3
France   

Publication History

Article published online:
16 March 2021

© 2021. European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. All rights reserved.

Georg Thieme Verlag KG
Rüdigerstraße 14, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany

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Zoom Image
Fig. 1 Diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for ampullary tumor. EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; MRCP, magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography; IDE, intraductal extension; EUS-FNA/B, endoscopic ultrasound fine needle aspiration/biopsy; LGD, low grade dysplasia; HGD, high grade dysplasia; Tis, tumor/carcinoma in situ; RFA, radiofrequency ablation; APC, argon plasma coagulation; EMR, endoscopic mucosal resection.