Endoscopic treatment of nonoperable large postsurgical esophageal fistulas: retrospective analysis of a single tertiary center cohort
Sebastian Petruzzella, Elodie Romailler, Thomas Greuter, Sarra Oumrani, Domenico Galasso, Maxime Robert, Styliani Mantziari, Markus Schäfer, Sébastien Godat

TL;DR
Endoscopic treatment is effective for large esophageal fistulas in patients who cannot undergo surgery, with high success rates and low risk.
Contribution
Demonstrates the efficacy of endoscopic treatment for large post-surgical esophageal fistulas in non-surgical candidates.
Findings
Endoscopic treatment achieved technical success in 94.7% of patients.
Clinical success with complete fistula closure was achieved in 77.2% of patients.
Procedure-related mortality was low at 3.5%.
Abstract
Anastomotic fistulas are a frequent and dreaded adverse event of esophagectomy. Endoscopic therapy using different techniques is now a well-established first-line treatment option. The aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy of such endoscopic treatments in patients not fit for surgical reintervention and particularly in cases of major tissue defects of >10 mm. Fifty-seven patients with postoperative large esophageal fistulas who were not considered for surgical reintervention were retrospectively analyzed after undergoing treatment with different endoscopic techniques in a single tertiary center. The primary endpoint was to evaluate the technical and clinical efficacy of endoscopic treatments of those fistulas. The secondary endpoint was to evaluate the endoscopic treatment–related adverse events. In 94.7% of patients (n = 54), the intervention was effectively carried out from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEsophageal and GI Pathology · Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment · Tracheal and airway disorders
