Influence of night duty on endoscopic therapy for bile duct stones

AIM To examine the influence of night duty(ND) on endoscopic therapy for biliary duct stones.METHODS The subjects consisted of 133 patients who received initial endoscopic therapy for biliary duct stones performed by eight endoscopists after they had been on(ND group, n = 34 patients) or not (day du...

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Published inWorld Journal of Gastroenterology Vol. 22; no. 42; pp. 9387 - 9393
Main Authors Sugimoto, Mitsuru, Takagi, Tadayuki, Suzuki, Rei, Konno, Naoki, Asama, Hiroyuki, Watanabe, Ko, Nakamura, Jun, Kikuchi, Hitomi, Waragai, Yuichi, Takasumi, Mika, Hikichi, Takuto, Ohira, Hiromasa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 14.11.2016
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ISSN1007-9327
2219-2840
DOI10.3748/wjg.v22.i42.9387

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Summary:AIM To examine the influence of night duty(ND) on endoscopic therapy for biliary duct stones.METHODS The subjects consisted of 133 patients who received initial endoscopic therapy for biliary duct stones performed by eight endoscopists after they had been on(ND group, n = 34 patients) or not (day duty(DD) group, n = 99 patients)Patient characteristics(age, gender, history of abdominal surgery, transverse diameter of the largest stone, number of stones), years of experience of the endoscopists, endoscopic procedures [sphincterotomy, papillary balloon dilation(EPBD), papillary large balloon dilation(EPLBD)], and outcomes of initial endoscopy(procedure time; rate of stone removal by the first endoscopist; proceduresuccess rate by the first endoscopist: removal of stones or endoscopic retrograde biliary drainage; rate of final stone removal; final procedure success rate; complications; hospitalization after the procedure) were compared retrospectively between the two groups. History of abdominal surgery and treatment outcomes were also compared between the groups for each of the four endoscopists who performed most of the procedures in the ND group.RESULTS There were no significant differences regarding the number of treatments performed by each endoscopist or the years of experience between the ND and DD groups. The frequency of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography procedures did not differ significantly between the groups. There were also no significant differences regarding patient characteristics: age, gender, history of abdominal surgery(ND 7: Billroth II 4, R-Y 3; DD 18: double tract reconstruction 1, Billroth I 3, Billroth II 6, R-Y 7, duodenoduodenostomy for annular pancreas 1), transverse diameter of largest stone, and number of stones between the two groups. Among the treatment procedures, the endoscopic s p h i n c t e r o t o m y a n d E P B D r a t e s d i d n o t d i f f e r significantly between the groups. However, EPLBD was performed more frequently in the ND group (47.1%(16/34) v s 19.2%(19/99))Regarding outcomes, there were no significant differences in the rate of stone removal, procedure success rate, complications(ND: pancreatitis 1; DD: pancreatitis 6, duodenal bleeding 1, decreased blood pressure 1, hypoxia 2), or hospitalization after the procedure. However, the procedure time was significantly longer in the ND group(71.5 ± 44.7 vs 54.2 ± 28.8). Among the four endoscopists, there were no significant differences in patient history of abdominal surgery, removal of stones, or procedure success rate. However, the procedure time for one endoscopist was significantly longer in the ND group.CONCLUSION The time required for endoscopic therapy for bile duct stones might be influenced by ND.
Bibliography:Mitsuru Sugimoto;Tadayuki Takagi;Rei Suzuki;Naoki Konno;Hiroyuki Asama;Ko Watanabe;Jun Nakamura;Hitomi Kikuchi;Yuichi Waragai;Mika Takasumi;Takuto Hikichi;Hiromasa Ohira;Department of Gastroenterology and Rheumatology, Fukushima Medical University, School of Medicine;Department of Endoscopy, Fukushima Medical University Hospital
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Correspondence to: Dr.Tadayuki Takagi, Associate Professor, Department of Gastroenterology and Rheumatology, Fukushima Medical University, School of Medicine, 1 Hikarigaoka, Fukushima City 960-1247, Fukushima, Japan. daccho@fmu.ac.jp
Telephone: +81-24-5471202 Fax: +81-24-5472055
Author contributions: Sugimoto M designed the research; Sugimoto M performed the research; Sugimoto M, Takagi T and Ohira H analyzed the data; Sugimoto M, Takagi T, and Ohira H wrote the paper; Takagi T, Suzuki R, Konno N, Asama H, Hikichi T, Watanabe K, Nakamura J, Kikuchi H, Waragai Y and Takasumi M provided clinical advice; Hikichi T and Ohira H supervised the report.
ISSN:1007-9327
2219-2840
DOI:10.3748/wjg.v22.i42.9387