The Use of Biodegradable Stents in Malignant Oesophageal Strictures for the Treatment of Dysphagia Before Neoadjuvant Treatment or Radical Radiotherapy: A Feasibility Study

Miltiadis Krokidis*, Chris Burke, Stavros Spiliopoulos, Panos Gkoutzios, Orla Hynes, Irfan Ahmed, Renato Dourado, Tarun Sabharwal, Robert Mason, Andreas Adam

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    25 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Purpose
    To evaluate the clinical results of the use of biodegradable oesophageal stents in malignant strictures.

    Methods
    Eleven patients were included in this prospective analysis in which a woven polydioxanone biodegradable oesophageal stent was used. The inclusion criterion was that the patient underwent neoadjuvant treatment or radical radiotherapy after the stent insertion. Primary end points were dysphagia score at discharge, stent patency, and complication rate. Secondary end points were overall survival and surgical outcome of surgery.

    Results
    There was a 100 % procedure technical success rate. Early complications occurred in three patients resulting in failure to restore oral nutrition. In the remaining eight patients, dysphagia was significantly improved at discharge. Mean stent patency rate in this group was 71.5 days. Stent dysfunction occurred in five of eight patients (62.5 %); in two of five patients this was due to local inflammatory reaction, and in three of five patients it was due to tumour growth after a mean time of 97.8 days, and a new metallic stent was consequently placed in four of five patients. One patient was successfully treated with esophagectomy. At the end of follow-up (mean time 102.1 days), three of eight stents were patent. The overall patient survival rate was 81.8 %.

    Conclusions
    Although short-term dysphagia scores improved, biodegradable stents do not appear to offer a clear beneficial effect in most cases of malignant strictures, particularly due to a local inflammatory reaction that may be induced. Technical improvement of the device and delineation of the patient group that would benefit from its use is necessary if further studies are to be conducted in the future.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1047-1054
    Number of pages8
    JournalCardiovascular and interventional radiology
    Volume36
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Aug 2013

    Keywords

    • Oesophageal cancer
    • Biodegradable implants
    • Neoadjuvant treatment
    • Palliative care
    • Dysphagia
    • EXPANDING PLASTIC STENT
    • BENIGN
    • THERAPY
    • CHEMORADIATION
    • CARCINOMA
    • EFFICACY
    • DISEASE
    • CANCER

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