Title of article :
Fluoroscopic Stenting as a Bridge to Surgery versus Emergency Management for Malignant Obstruction of the Colon
Author/Authors :
Xue, Fan Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China , Lin, Feng Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China , Zhou, Jun Department of Intervention - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province, China , Feng, Ning Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China , Cui, You-Gang Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China , Zhang, Xu Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China , Yi, Yu-Peng Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China , Liu, Wen-Zhi Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery - Affiliated Zhongshan Hospital of Dalian University - Dalian 116001 - Liaoning Province - China
Abstract :
Aim. To investigate the feasibility of a SEMS (self-expandable metallic stent) as a bridge to surgery for malignant colonic obstruction. Methods. We retrospectively reviewed 83 patients that were in accordance with inclusion criteria; of these, 33 patients that underwent fluoroscopy-guided SEMS placement followed by elective curative resection were classified as a SEMS group and 50 patients, who received emergency surgery (ES), were classified as an ES group. /e clinicopathological characteristics, surgeryrelated parameters, complications, and three-year survival rate were compared between the two groups. Results. No significant
differences between the two groups were observed in any of the clinicopathologic characteristics except for higher preoperative
absolute neutrophil count in the ES group (P < 0.001). Compared to the ES group, the SEMS group has significantly more cases,
which featured a laparoscopic approach (72.7% vs. 14.0%, P < 0.001), lower overall stoma rate (0% vs. 34.0%, P < 0.001), and lower
overall postoperative morbidity (27.3% vs. 56.0%, P � 0.010). /e oncological outcomes did not differ significantly between the
two groups in terms of three-year overall survival (P � 0.125). /e technical and clinical success rates of stent placement were
91.7% and 100%, respectively. Conclusion. Patients treated with the stent-surgery approach had significant short-term superiorities and similar long-term outcomes, compared to patients who had emergency surgery alone. /e SEMS is, therefore, safe and feasible as a bridge to surgery for malignant colonic obstruction.
Keywords :
Fluoroscopic Stenting , Bridge , Surgery versus , Emergency Management , Malignant Obstruction , Colon
Journal title :
Emergency Medicine International