Background and study aims: Tubular stents have been used to accomplish endoscopic transluminal drainage, but
do not impart lumen-to-lumen anchorage. We evaluated a novel lumen-apposing stent
designed for enteric drainage of nonadherent lumens.
Material and methods: Ex vivo benchtop testing was performed to quantify various physical and performance
metrics of the stent (Axios). A simulator was developed to test the stent deployment
through an echoendoscope. Survival experiments were performed on four pigs. Under
endosonographic guidance, a cholecystogastrostomy tract was created and the stent
was deployed across the lumens. Direct cholecystoscopy was performed. Surveillance
gastroscopy was performed at weekly intervals for up to 8 weeks. Measured outcomes
were procedural success, safety, and device durability and patency.
Results: In benchtop testing, the Axios stent withstood various vector forces of movement,
yet allowed easy removability from the simulated tissue. The stent was successfully
deployed across the stomach and gallbladder lumens in all four animals without complication.
Direct cholecystoscopy and contrast injection documented the absence of tissue trauma
and leakage. Gastroscopy at weekly intervals showed the stent in stable position without
dislodgment. The stent remained patent in all animals. The covering remained intact
and there was no hyperplastic tissue ingrowth or overgrowth, or tissue injury. One
stent was removed at 4 weeks. On necropsy, the gallbladders showed focal adherence
to the stomach at the site of cystogastrostomy with a negative leak test.
Conclusions: The Axios stent enables the creation of a robust and reliable conduit between nonadherent
lumens around the gastrointestinal tract.
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K. F. BinmoellerMD
Interventional Endoscopy Services
California Pacific Medical Center
2351 Clay St, 6th Floor
San Francisco
CA 94115
USA
Email: BinmoeK@sutterhealth.org