Abstract

Despite experienced hands and availability of various well-designed catheters and wires, selective bile duct cannulation may still fail in 10–20% of cases during endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). In case standard ERCP cannulation technique fails, salvage options include advanced ERCP cannulation techniques such as double-guidewire technique (DGW) with or without pancreatic stenting and precut papillotomy, percutaneous biliary drainage (PBD), and endoscopic ultrasound-guided Rendezvous (EUS-RV) ERCP. If the pancreatic duct is inadvertently entered during cannulation attempts, DGW technique is a reasonable next step, which can be followed by pancreatic stenting to reduce risks of post-ERCP pancreatitis (PEP). Studies suggest that early precut papillotomy is not associated with a higher risk of PEP, while needle-knife fistulotomy is the preferred method. For patients with critical clinical condition who may not be fit for endoscopy, surgically altered anatomy in which endoscopic biliary drainage is not feasible, and non-communicating multisegmental biliary obstruction, PBD has a unique role to provide successful biliary drainage efficiently in this particular population. As endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided biliary drainage techniques advance, EUS-RV ERCP has been increasingly employed to guide bile duct access and cannulation with satisfactory clinical outcomes and is especially valuable for benign pathology at centres where expertise is available. Endoscopists should become familiar with each technique’s advantages and limitations before deciding the most appropriate treatment that is tailored to patient’s anatomy and clinical needs.

Highlights

  • Technical sphincterotome, by cutting thepancreatic septum between bile The and initial pancreatic ducts success rates for needle-knife fistulotomy (NKF), needleneedle-knife papillotomy (NKP), success and transpancreatic septotomy (TPS) rates are comparable at 75–100%, 73–84%, and 95–100%,at

  • Percutaneous biliary drainage (PBD) has been the traditional rescue treatment to alleviate biliary obstruction if bile duct cannulation by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) fails despite advanced techniques

  • As interventional endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) procedures evolve with more dedicated accessories developed in the last decade, EUS-guided biliary drainage (EUS-BD) has been increasingly applied in patients with benign or malignant pancreatobiliary pathologies

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Selective bile duct cannulation is an essential skill to achieve biliary drainage in which up to 10–20% of cases encountered may fail even under experienced endoscopists’ hands [1,2]. Success rate of selective bile duct cannulation can be influenced by both operator (endoscopist’s experience) and patient (anatomy) factors. Conditions such as intradiverticular or floppy papilla, small inconspicuous ampullary orifice, long and narrow distal segment of the bile duct, difficult bile duct axis, tumor invasion to major papilla, surgically altered anatomy, or Gastroenterol. If cannulation cannot be achieved by advanced ERCP stenting and precut papillotomy can be applied. Pancreatitis, pneumoperitoneum, bile leak, peritonitis, and flare-up of sepsis

Advanced ERCP Cannulation Techniques
Advantages
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