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A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting

Background Stenting provides effective palliation of malignant dysphagia for irresectable tumours due to either local invasion, metastatic disease, or poor performance status. Immediate technical success rates are very high, with clinical improvement approaching 90% in most reported series. Complica...

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Main Author: Teyangesikayi, Gilbert
Other Authors: Chinnery, Galya
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Teyangesikayi, Gilbert
author2 Chinnery, Galya
author_browse Chinnery, Galya
Teyangesikayi, Gilbert
author_facet Chinnery, Galya
Teyangesikayi, Gilbert
author_sort Teyangesikayi, Gilbert
collection Thesis
description Background Stenting provides effective palliation of malignant dysphagia for irresectable tumours due to either local invasion, metastatic disease, or poor performance status. Immediate technical success rates are very high, with clinical improvement approaching 90% in most reported series. Complications specific to oesophageal stenting include perforation, pain, aspiration, volume reflux, bleeding, migration, tumour overgrowth and ingrowth. Methods This retrospective audit of palliative oesophageal stenting over a three-year period (March 2018 - March 2021), with review of technical and clinical outcomes, aimed to determine local incidence and management of complications. Results The majority (73.4%) of palliative stents were placed for squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) with a total of 354 stent insertion attempts undertaken in 297 patients (49 requiring multiple stents). Three unsuccessful insertions and six incorrectly placed stents, all immediately addressed, equated to an immediate technicalsuccess rate of 97.5%. Most (346; 98.6%) were fully covered stents; only two partially covered and three uncovered stents were inserted. Seventeen stents (4.8%) were placed for a confirmed trachea-oesophageal fistula. Twenty-one (6.0%) immediate insertion-related complications occurred, including two oesophageal perforations. Five patients required removal of proximal stents on the same day due to significant globus sensation or chest pain. There was no mortality due to immediate stent insertion related complications. Dysphagia improvement was registered in all (100% clinical success rate) successful stent insertions. Late complications occurred in 73 (20.8%). The most frequent indication requiring reintervention was tumour overgrowth (30; 10.1%) occurring at a median 63.5 days(IQR 41.0 - 103.3 days). Stent migration occurred in 18 patients (6.1%) at a median 28.0 days(IQR 10.0 - 52.8 days). Of the total 354 placed stents, 264 (75.2%) had no documented complications for the lifetime of that stent. When comparing the rate of stent migration and tumour overgrowth by tumour position, distal tumours (>30cm from the incisors) were 8.93 times (p<0.0001) more likely to migrate than proximal tumours (>30cm from the incisors) were 8.93 times (p<0.0001) more likely to migrate than proximal tumours (<30cm). Tumour overgrowth was more likely in proximal tumours, but this did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion: Oesophageal stenting is an effective and safe palliation of malignant dysphagia. Outcomes reported by this cohort from a low/middle income setting compare favorably to high volume international units.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41374 A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting Teyangesikayi, Gilbert Chinnery, Galya Jonas, Eduard surgery Background Stenting provides effective palliation of malignant dysphagia for irresectable tumours due to either local invasion, metastatic disease, or poor performance status. Immediate technical success rates are very high, with clinical improvement approaching 90% in most reported series. Complications specific to oesophageal stenting include perforation, pain, aspiration, volume reflux, bleeding, migration, tumour overgrowth and ingrowth. Methods This retrospective audit of palliative oesophageal stenting over a three-year period (March 2018 - March 2021), with review of technical and clinical outcomes, aimed to determine local incidence and management of complications. Results The majority (73.4%) of palliative stents were placed for squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) with a total of 354 stent insertion attempts undertaken in 297 patients (49 requiring multiple stents). Three unsuccessful insertions and six incorrectly placed stents, all immediately addressed, equated to an immediate technicalsuccess rate of 97.5%. Most (346; 98.6%) were fully covered stents; only two partially covered and three uncovered stents were inserted. Seventeen stents (4.8%) were placed for a confirmed trachea-oesophageal fistula. Twenty-one (6.0%) immediate insertion-related complications occurred, including two oesophageal perforations. Five patients required removal of proximal stents on the same day due to significant globus sensation or chest pain. There was no mortality due to immediate stent insertion related complications. Dysphagia improvement was registered in all (100% clinical success rate) successful stent insertions. Late complications occurred in 73 (20.8%). The most frequent indication requiring reintervention was tumour overgrowth (30; 10.1%) occurring at a median 63.5 days(IQR 41.0 - 103.3 days). Stent migration occurred in 18 patients (6.1%) at a median 28.0 days(IQR 10.0 - 52.8 days). Of the total 354 placed stents, 264 (75.2%) had no documented complications for the lifetime of that stent. When comparing the rate of stent migration and tumour overgrowth by tumour position, distal tumours (>30cm from the incisors) were 8.93 times (p<0.0001) more likely to migrate than proximal tumours (>30cm from the incisors) were 8.93 times (p<0.0001) more likely to migrate than proximal tumours (<30cm). Tumour overgrowth was more likely in proximal tumours, but this did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion: Oesophageal stenting is an effective and safe palliation of malignant dysphagia. Outcomes reported by this cohort from a low/middle income setting compare favorably to high volume international units. 2025-04-09T09:11:55Z 2025-04-09T09:11:55Z 2024 2025-04-08T12:59:32Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41374 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle surgery
Teyangesikayi, Gilbert
A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
title_full A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
title_fullStr A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
title_full_unstemmed A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
title_short A review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
title_sort review of the incidence and management of complications following malignant oesophageal stenting
topic surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41374
work_keys_str_mv AT teyangesikayigilbert areviewoftheincidenceandmanagementofcomplicationsfollowingmalignantoesophagealstenting
AT teyangesikayigilbert reviewoftheincidenceandmanagementofcomplicationsfollowingmalignantoesophagealstenting