Stainier Laurent, Hubert Catherine, Jouret Mathieu, Deprez Pierre, Goffette Pierre, Gigot Jean-François
Division of Hepato-Biliary and Pancreatic Surgery, Department of Abdominal Surgery and Transplantation Saint-Luc University Hospital, Brussels, Belgium.
Hepatogastroenterology. 2007 Jun;54(76):999-1003.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: To report the hazards of surgical management in patients suffering from benign postoperative biliary strictures (BBS) previously treated with self-expanding metallic stents (SEMS).
Five patients with BBS were treated by SEMS (Wallstent in 3 patients and Gianturco stent in 2) through an endoscopic (2 patients) or a percutaneous transhepatic route (3 patients). Metallic stent obstruction due to intraprosthetic epithelial hyperplasia was observed in all patients, being responsible for severe cholangitis and intrahepatic stones in 3 and 2 patients respectively.
One patient remains free of symptoms but presented with right posterior liver atrophy. Difficult biliary repair was encountered in 3 patients, requiring excision and reconstruction of the main biliary convergence for severely damaged biliary wall and epithelium by metallic stents. One patient with a SEMS extended upward the right secondary biliary divisions required a right hemihepatectomy.
The surgical management of benign biliary strictures is severely complicated by the presence of metallic stents. Thus, SEMS should not be employed for treating BBS in healthy patients with a low operative risk.