Thoracoscopic Diverticulectomy for Epiphrenic Esophageal Diverticulum after Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy: A Report of Four Cases
Takeshi Yamashita, Koji Otsuka, Masahiro Kohmoto, Akira Saito, Yutaka Kishimoto, Kentaro Motegi, Tomotake Ariyoshi, Satoru Goto, Haruhiro Inoue, Masahiko Murakami, Takeshi Aoki

TL;DR
This paper reports four successful cases of thoracoscopic surgery to treat large esophageal diverticula that did not respond to initial endoscopic treatment.
Contribution
The study introduces thoracoscopic diverticulectomy as a safe and effective alternative for treating large EED after failed POEM.
Findings
Thoracoscopic surgery was safely performed in four patients with large EED after POEM.
No postoperative complications occurred, and all patients improved with no relapse.
Thoracoscopy provided better working space compared to laparoscopic procedures.
Abstract
An epiphrenic esophageal diverticulum (EED) typically occurs in association with esophageal motility disorders such as esophageal achalasia. Although peroral esophageal myotomy (POEM) is the current standard treatment for esophageal achalasia, laparoscopic diverticulectomy with esophageal myotomy and fundoplication are usually performed for EED. Here, we report four cases of thoracoscopic esophageal diverticulectomy performed for symptomatic EED after POEM for esophageal achalasia. Between 2022 and March 2024, four patients with EED (average diameter, 68 mm) underwent endoscopic esophageal cleaning prior to surgery. POEM was initially performed in all four cases; however, two patients experienced persistent symptoms, while two experienced progressive EED enlargement over the years, necessitating additional surgery. All operations were performed thoracoscopically with the patient in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDysphagia Assessment and Management · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Esophageal and GI Pathology
