Endoscopy 2011; 43(6): 484-489
DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1256249
Original article

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Complications in and performance of double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE): results from a large prospective DBE database in Germany

O.  Möschler1 , A.  May2 , M.  K.  Müller1 , C.  Ell2 , for the German DBE Study Group
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology, Marienhospital – Teaching Hospital of Hanover University Medical School, Osnabrück, Germany
  • 2Department of Internal Medicine II, HSK Wiesbaden – Teaching Hospital of the University of Mainz, Wiesbaden, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

submitted 12 January 2010

accepted after revision 10 December 2010

Publication Date:
02 March 2011 (online)

Preview

Background and study aims: Double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE) has been established as an invaluable tool for the diagnosis and treatment of small-bowel diseases. To evaluate complications, procedural data, and diagnostic yield of DBE examinations in Germany the presented database was introduced.

Methods: A prospective database of all DBE examinations in 62 endoscopic centers in Germany was developed using data from a standard questionnaire. Information requested included data on personal information, indications, procedural information, interventions, diagnostic yield, and complications.

Results: In total, 2245 DBE examinations in 1765 patients were reported prospectively over a 2-year period. The most frequent indication was overt or occult bleeding in the small intestine and the most frequent intervention was argon plasma coagulation of angiodysplasia. The rate of complete enteroscopy was only 23 %. A clear dependency of indication and diagnostic yield could be documented, ranging widely from a diagnostic yield of 16 % in patients with abdominal pain and 82 % in patients with Peutz–Jeghers syndrome. A total of 27 complications produced a complication rate for all examinations of 1.2 %. Pancreatitis was diagnosed in four cases (0.3 % of oral-route DBE). Perforations occurred in three patients, two of whom had undergone polypectomy in the small bowel (1.5 % of 137 polypectomies).

Conclusion: DBE is a safe endoscopic technique according to this large prospective database, with a complication rate of 1.2 %. The diagnostic yield of DBE examinations depends upon the quality of indication, and is very low in patients with the single indications of “diarrhea” or “abdominal pain”.

References

O. MöschlerMD 

Department of Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology
Marienhospital

Bischofsstraße 1
49074 Osnabrück
Germany

Fax: +49-541-3264656

Email: oliver.moeschler@mho.de