Volume 8, Issue 5 pp. 513-516

Simultaneous surgical and interventional radiological approach to treat complicated biliary strictures after pediatric liver transplantation

Paolo R. O. Salvalaggio

Paolo R. O. Salvalaggio

Departments of Surgery

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Daniel A. Bambini

Daniel A. Bambini

Departments of Surgery

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James Donaldson

James Donaldson

Radiology

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Martha SakerPeter F. Whitington

Peter F. Whitington

Pediatrics, Children's Memorial Hospital, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA

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Estella M. Alonso

Estella M. Alonso

Pediatrics, Children's Memorial Hospital, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA

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Riccardo A. Superina

Riccardo A. Superina

Departments of Surgery

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First published: 08 September 2004
Citations: 6
Riccardo A. Superina MD, Department of Surgery, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, 700 W Fullerton St, Suite N745, Chicago, IL 60614, USA
Tel.: +(773) 975 8821
Fax: +(773) 975 8534
E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Abstract: Post-transplantation biliary strictures occur in 5–15% of the pediatric liver transplant patients and are conventionally managed by interventional radiological techniques. Failure of this treatment leads to reoperation and sometimes to retransplantation. Herein, we describe a surgical approach and interventional radiologic approach to manage biliary strictures that failed the conventional radiologic treatment, in order to avoid retransplantation. Included in the study were eight children who underwent liver transplantation at our center or referred to our institution for evaluation of the biliary strictures that failed radiological treatment. Biliary strictures were confirmed by a narrowing of the biliary anastomosis on the percutaneous transhepatic cholangiogram. At surgery, a guide wire was introduced into the distal bile system through the use of an enterotomy in Roux limb. Over the guide wire, the stricture was ballooned and the diameter of the biliary tree was determined. A pigtail catheter was introduced on the biliary tree across the abdominal wall, the liver, the stricture and the anastomosis into the enterotomy. A final cholangiogram confirmed the positioning of the catheter. Mean follow-up was 39.8 ± 20.8 months. All patients had their strictures successfully treated and survived the procedure. Three patients were readmitted to the hospital with fever. It was necessary to revise the hepaticojejunostomy in three patients because of cholangitis and/or recurrence of biliary stricture. Of the eight patients of this study, two required retransplantation and one died. We conclude that an aggressive combined surgical and radiologic approach can avoid retransplantation in patients with complicated post-transplant biliary strictures.

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