Abstract

Background: Recently, endoscopic treatment has been attempted to counter benign biliary strictures. It is expected to be an alternative to surgical operation because of its lower morbidity and its convenience, but the long‐term results have not yet been sufficiently elucidated. Here, we evaluate the short‐ and long‐term results of endoscopic stenting in patients with benign biliary strictures, and also describe a new technique using a covered metallic stent (CMS) in the refractory cases.Methods: The charts of 22 consecutive patients with benign biliary stricture treated endoscopically at our institutions between December 1995 and December 2002 were analyzed retrospectively.Results: Stricture etiology was as follows: postoperative, nine; chronic pancreatitis, seven; primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), three; and other, three. The stent initially placed was a 7 Fr in 11 patients and a 10 Fr in 11 patients. Eighteen of 22 patients (82%) were successfully treated by the initial treatment, and stents were removed after a mean duration of 3.1 months (range: 1–14 months). In the remaining four patients, stents were exchanged once to four times after that, and a CMS was placed as the second endoprosthesis in two patients with chronic pancreatitis. These stents, including CMS, were finally removed from these four patients after a mean duration of 14.8 months (range: 8–22 months). Over a median follow‐up period of 26 months (range: 6–78 months), one recurrence has been observed, in which case a CMS was placed in a patient with chronic pancreatitis. The CMS was removed successfully 6 months after the insertion, and no recurrence was observed during the 6‐month follow‐up period.Conclusions: Endoscopic stenting for benign biliary stricture is an alternative to surgery because it shows satisfactory results. Placement of a CMS would also be an option in refractory strictures, such as those due in chronic pancreatitis, if the certainty of removal is proven by cumulative experience with a large number of patients.

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