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Published in: BMC Gastroenterology 1/2020

Open Access 01-12-2020 | Palliative Medicine | Research article

A newly designed uncovered biliary stent for palliation of malignant obstruction: results of a prospective study

Authors: Christopher Lawrence, Jose Nieto, Willis G. Parsons, André Roy, Nalini M. Guda, Stephen E. Steinberg, Muhammad K. Hasan, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Satish Nagula, Nicholas D. Dey, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, On behalf of the Study Investigators

Published in: BMC Gastroenterology | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Background

Biliary decompression can reduce symptoms and improve quality of life in patients with malignant biliary obstruction. Endoscopically placed stents have become the standard of care for biliary drainage with the aim of improving hepatic function, relieving jaundice, and reducing adverse effects of obstruction. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the performance characteristics of a newly-designed, uncovered metal biliary stent for the palliation of malignant biliary obstruction.

Methods

This post-market, prospective study included patients with biliary obstruction due to a malignant neoplasm treated with a single-type, commercially available uncovered self-expanding metal stent (SEMS). Stents were placed as clinically indicated for palliation of jaundice and to potentially facilitate neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. The main outcome measure was freedom from recurrent biliary obstruction (within the stent) requiring re-intervention within 1, 3, and 6 months of stent insertion. Secondary outcome measures included device-related adverse events and technical success of stent deployment.

Results

SEMS were placed in 113 patients (73 men; mean age, 69); a single stent was inserted in 106 patients, and 2 stents were placed in 7 patients. Forty-eight patients survived and/or completed the 6 month study protocol. Freedom from symptomatic recurrent biliary obstruction requiring re-intervention was achieved in 108 of 113 patients (95.6, 95%CI = 90.0–98.6%) at study exit for each patient. Per interval analysis yielded the absence of recurrent biliary obstruction in 99.0% of patients at 1 month (n = 99; 95%CI = 97.0–100%), 96.6% of patients at 3 months (n = 77; 95%CI = 92.7–100%), and 93.3% of patients at 6 months (n = 48; 95%CI = 86.8–99.9%). In total, only 5 patients (4.4%) were considered failures of the primary endpoint. Most of these failures (4/5) were due to stent occlusion from tumor ingrowth or overgrowth. Overall technical success rate of stent deployment was 99.2%. There were 2 cases of stent-related adverse events (1.8%). There were no cases of post-procedure stent migration, stent-related perforation, or stent-related deaths.

Conclusions

This newly designed and marketed biliary SEMS system appears to be effective at relieving biliary obstruction and preventing re-intervention within 6 months of insertion in the overwhelming majority of patients. The device has an excellent safety profile, and associated high technical success rate during deployment.

Trial registration

The study was registered on clinicaltrials.​gov on 14 October 2013 and the study registration number is NCT01962168. University of Massachusetts Medical School did not participate in the study.
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Metadata
Title
A newly designed uncovered biliary stent for palliation of malignant obstruction: results of a prospective study
Authors
Christopher Lawrence
Jose Nieto
Willis G. Parsons
André Roy
Nalini M. Guda
Stephen E. Steinberg
Muhammad K. Hasan
Juan Carlos Bucobo
Satish Nagula
Nicholas D. Dey
Jonathan M. Buscaglia
On behalf of the Study Investigators
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Gastroenterology / Issue 1/2020
Electronic ISSN: 1471-230X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12876-020-01325-9

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