Treatment of anastomotic leakage following Ivor Lewis esophagectomy—10 year experience from a Nordic center
Tobias Hauge, Thomas Dretvik, Egil Johnson, Tom Mala

TL;DR
This study examines the treatment outcomes of anastomotic leakage after a specific type of esophagectomy, finding that most cases can be managed endoscopically with good results.
Contribution
The paper presents a 10-year clinical experience from a Nordic center on managing anastomotic leakage with various endoscopic strategies.
Findings
Most anastomotic leakages healed with endoscopic treatment, preserving the anastomosis.
Airway fistulas occurred in 15% of patients, associated with leak severity.
EVT + stent treatment resulted in longer healing times compared to other methods.
Abstract
Anastomotic leakage (AL) is a dreaded complication following esophageal resection. No clear consensus exist for the optimal handling of this severe complication. The aim of this study was to describe the treatment outcome following AL. We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study including all patients with AL operated with Ivor Lewis esophagectomy from 2010 to 2021 at Oslo University Hospital, Norway. 74/526 (14%) patients had AL. Patient outcomes were analyzed and categorized according to main AL treatment strategy; stent (54%), endoscopic vacuum therapy and stent (EVT + stent) (19%), nasogastric tube and antibiotics (conservative) (16%), EVT (8%) and by other endoscopic means (other) (3%). One patient had surgical debridement of the chest cavity. In 66 patients (89%), the perforation healed after median 27 (range: 4–174) days. Airway fistulation was observed in 11 patients…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAgriculture and Rural Development Research
