Endoscopic management of esophageal anastomotic leaks and perforations with the use of esophageal stents is technically feasible. It seems to be safe and effective when performed along with mediastinal or pleural drainage. Esophageal stent can, therefore, be considered as a treatment option in the management of patients who present early after esophageal perforation or anastomotic leak with limited mediastinal or pleural contamination.
We report the case of a patient who was noted to have inserted an acupuncture needle into his abdomen. The needle migrated to the heart and was removed from the right ventricle using cardiopulmonary bypass.
Introduction
Endoscopic placement of oesophageal stent across the benign oesophageal perforation and postoperative oesophageal anastomotic leak might help to control the sepsis and reduce the associated mortality and morbidity.
Aims/Background
The aim of this review is to assess the safety and effectiveness of oesophageal stents in the management of benign oesophageal perforation and oesophageal anastomotic leaks.
Method
All the published case series reporting the use of metallic and plastic stents in the management of postoperative anastomotic leaks, spontaneous oesophageal perforations, iatrogenic oesophageal perforations were identified from MEDLINE, EMBASE and PUBMED (1990–2012). Primary outcomes assessed were technical success rates and complete healing rates. Secondary outcomes assessed were stent migration rates, stent perforation rates, duration of hospital stay, time to stent removal and mortality rates. A pooled analysis was performed and subgroup analysis was performed for plastic vs metallic stents and anastomotic leaks vs perforations separately.
Results
27 case series with 340 patients were included. Technical and clinical success rates of stenting were 91% and 81% respectively. Stent migration rates were significantly higher with plastic stents compared to metallic stents (40/148 vs 13/117 patients respectively; p=0.001). Patients with metallic stents had significantly higher incidence of post procedure strictures (p=0.006). There was no significant difference in the primary or secondary outcomes when stenting was performed for anastomotic leaks or perforations.
Conclusion
Endoscopic management of oesophageal anastomotic leaks and perforations with the use of oesophageal stents is technically feasible. It appears to be safe and effective when performed along with mediastinal or pleural drainage.
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