A 75-year-old woman was admitted for the extraction of an esophageal fully covered
metal stent (upper esophageal sphincter stent [80 × 20 mm]; Leufen Medical, Berlin,
Germany). The stent had been implanted 5 weeks earlier to treat an esophageal perforation
sustained during bougienage of a benign proximal esophageal stenosis.
The location of the stent was distal to the stricture, so that only a transnasal endoscope
(EG-530NW [5.1-mm outer diameter and 2.0-mm working channel]; Fujifilm Europe, Düsseldorf,
Germany) could be passed. Only a small biopsy forceps (FB-21K-1; Olympus, Tokyo, Japan)
was available for stent manipulation. The upper retrieval loop of the stent was grasped
with the forceps, but the loop was destroyed while traction was applied to remove
the stent.
Using a biopsy forceps, we carried a 0.035-in guidewire (Jagwire; Boston Scientific,
Natick, Massachusetts, USA) into the esophagus parallel to the endoscope. The guidewire
was pushed through the distal retrieval loop ([Fig. 1 a, b ]) and then grasped with the forceps on the other side of the loop ([Fig. 2 ]). Subsequently, the guidewire was pulled out through the patient’s mouth, forming
a loop ([Fig. 3 ]). With traction applied to the guidewire loop, the stent was now removed from the
esophagus by inversion (peeled away) ([Fig. 4 ], [Video 1 ]).
Fig. 1 After failure of the primary stent retrieval mechanism in a patient with a proximal
esophageal stenosis, a forceps is used to: a carry a guidewire alongside the endoscope; and b pass it through the distal retrieval loop of the stent.
Fig. 2 The guidewire is grasped with the forceps on the other side of the loop and pulled
back through the patient’s mouth.
Fig. 3 The guidewire now forms a loop at the distal part of the stent, with both ends outside.
Fig. 4 With traction applied to the guidewire loop, the stent is removed from the esophagus
by inversion (“peeled away”).
With traction applied to the guidewire loop, the stent is removed from the esophagus
by inversion (“peeled away”).
Several techniques have been described as alternatives to stent removal with a proximal
retrieval loop. Retrieval of a stent from the stomach with a polypectomy snare (lasso
technique) is used mostly when a stent has migrated, and in our case, it would have
been necessary to use traction first to move the stent into the stomach [1 ]. Inversion of the stent, as in our case, reduces the shearing forces on the surrounding
esophageal tissue and has been described previously [2 ]
[3 ].
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first reported case of the use of a guidewire
to extract an esophageal fully covered metal stent as a rescue procedure after damage
of the proximal retrieval loop in the setting of a proximal esophageal stenosis.
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