机构地区:[1]Department of Internal Medicine,Harbor-UCLA Medical Center,Torrance,CA 90509,United States [2]Department of Psychology,Social,Decision,and Organizational Sciences Program,University of Maryland,College Park,MD 20742,United States [3]Department of Internal Medicine,Division of Gastroenterology,Harbor-UCLA Medical Center,Torrance,CA 90509,United States
出 处:《World Journal of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy》2019年第11期523-530,共8页世界胃肠内镜杂志(英文版)(电子版)
摘 要:BACKGROUND Hepatic cirrhosis is associated with greater adverse event rates following surgical procedures and is thought to have a higher risk of complications with interventional procedures in general.However,these same patients often require interventional gastrointestinal procedures such as endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography(ERCP)and endoscopic ultrasound(EUS).While studies examining this scenario exist,the overall body of evidence for adverse event rates associated with ERCP/EUS procedures is more limited.We sought add to the literature by examining the incidence of adverse events after ERCP/EUS procedures in our safety-net hospital population with the hypothesis that severity of cirrhosis correlates with higher adverse event rates.AIM To examine whether increasing severity of cirrhosis is associated with greater incidence of adverse events after interventional ERCP/EUS procedures.METHODS We performed a retrospective study of patients diagnosed with hepatic cirrhosis who underwent ERCP and/or EUS-guided fine needle aspirations/fine needle biopsies from January 1,2016 to March 14,2019 at our safety net hospital.We recorded Child-Pugh and Model for End-stage Liver Disease(MELD-Na)scores at time of procedure,interventions completed,and 30-day post-procedural adverse events.Statistical analyses were done to assess whether Child-Pugh class and MELD-Na score were associated with greater adverse event rates and whether advanced techniques(single-operator cholangioscopy,electrohydraulic lithotripsy/laser lithotripsy,or needle-knife techniques)were associated with higher complication rates.RESULTS 77 procedures performed on 36 patients were included.The study population consisted primarily of middle-aged Hispanic males.30-d procedure-related adverse events included gastrointestinal bleeding(7.8%),infection(6.5%),and bile leak(2%).The effect of Child-Pugh class C vs class A and B significantly predicted adverse events(β=0.55,P<0.01).MELD-Na scores also significantly predicted adverse events(β=0.037,P<0.01BACKGROUND Hepatic cirrhosis is associated with greater adverse event rates following surgical procedures and is thought to have a higher risk of complications with interventional procedures in general. However, these same patients often require interventional gastrointestinal procedures such as endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography(ERCP) and endoscopic ultrasound(EUS). While studies examining this scenario exist, the overall body of evidence for adverse event rates associated with ERCP/EUS procedures is more limited. We sought add to the literature by examining the incidence of adverse events after ERCP/EUS procedures in our safety-net hospital population with the hypothesis that severity of cirrhosis correlates with higher adverse event rates.AIM To examine whether increasing severity of cirrhosis is associated with greater incidence of adverse events after interventional ERCP/EUS procedures.METHODS We performed a retrospective study of patients diagnosed with hepatic cirrhosis who underwent ERCP and/or EUS-guided fine needle aspirations/fine needle biopsies from January 1, 2016 to March 14, 2019 at our safety net hospital. We recorded Child-Pugh and Model for End-stage Liver Disease(MELD-Na) scores at time of procedure, interventions completed, and 30-day post-procedural adverse events. Statistical analyses were done to assess whether Child-Pugh class and MELD-Na score were associated with greater adverse event rates and whether advanced techniques(single-operator cholangioscopy, electrohydraulic lithotripsy/laser lithotripsy, or needle-knife techniques) were associated with higher complication rates.RESULTS77 procedures performed on 36 patients were included. The study population consisted primarily of middle-aged Hispanic males. 30-d procedure-related adverse events included gastrointestinal bleeding(7.8%), infection(6.5%), and bile leak(2%). The effect of Child-Pugh class C vs class A and B significantly predicted adverse events(β = 0.55, P < 0.01). MELD-Na scores also significantly predicted adve
关 键 词:ENDOSCOPIC retrograde CHOLANGIOPANCREATOGRAPHY ENDOSCOPIC ultrasound FINE-NEEDLE ASPIRATION FINE-NEEDLE biopsy Hepatic cirrhosis Model for END-STAGE Liver Disease CHILD-PUGH Class Adverse events
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