Volume 20, Issue 10 pp. 867-874

The ‘Blind Innsbruck Ostomy’, a cutaneous enterostomy for long-term histologic surveillance after small bowel transplantation

Alfred Königsrainer

Alfred Königsrainer

Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, Tübingen University Hospital, Tübingen, Germany

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Ruth Ladurner

Ruth Ladurner

Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, Tübingen University Hospital, Tübingen, Germany

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Claudia Iannetti

Claudia Iannetti

Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

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Wolfgang Steurer

Wolfgang Steurer

Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, Tübingen University Hospital, Tübingen, Germany

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Robert Öllinger

Robert Öllinger

Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

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Felix Offner

Felix Offner

Department of Pathology, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria

Department of Pathology, Feldkirch State Hospital, Feldkirch, Austria

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Adolf Kreczy

Adolf Kreczy

Department of Pathology, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria

Department of Pathology, Klinikum Coburg, Coburg, Germany

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Raimund Margreiter

Raimund Margreiter

Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

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First published: 17 August 2007
Citations: 5
Alfred Königsrainer MD, Department of General and Transplant Surgery, Tübingen University Hospital, Hoppe-Seyler-Str. 3, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany. Tel.: 0049 7071 29 86620; fax: 0049 7071 29 5588; e-mail: [email protected]

Summary

Intestinal transplantation has evolved into an established treatment for patients with intestinal failure. Although acute rejection episodes are reversible, late onset and chronic rejections remain major prognostic factors. We describe here our experience with endoscopic and histologic long-term monitoring through a cutaneous enterostomy. Between 1989 and 2003, 24 intestinal transplants were performed. After revascularization and reconstruction of proximal intestinal continuity, a side-to-end ileo-enterostomy was performed 20 cm from the stoma and the terminal allograft ileostomy left in the abdominal wall. Approximately after 2 months, in eight patients (nine transplants), the stoma was excluded from the gastrointestinal continuity, allowing ongoing endoscopy and histologic examination. Of 280 forceps biopsies, 64 (23%) were performed through the ‘blind ostomy’. Eleven acute allograft rejections were diagnosed between days 3 and 51, with two episodes in three cases. Through the ‘blind ostomy’, a late mild acute rejection was diagnosed in five instances, three to 37 months after transplantation. In all these patients, basal immunosuppression was intensified. Chronic rejection was seen in three cases 4–26 months after transplantation. In one of the three patients, chronic rejection was diagnosed from the excluded blind enterostomy. A long-term cutaneous enterostomy, even if disconnected from the intestinal continuity, enables simple long-term monitoring of small bowel allografts.

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