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A multi-center evaluation of endoscopic submucosal dissection in the United States: The American experience [Meeting Abstract]

Chapman, C G; Haber, G B; Draganov, P V; Monkemuller, K; Ross, A S; Irani, S; Wang, A Y; Kahaleh, M; Mudireddy, P R; Yuen, P Y S; Koller, K; Yang, D; Coman, R M; Kumar, U; Razzak, A; Uppal, D S; Konda, V J; Siddiqui, U D; Koons, A; Waxman, I
Background: Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is a technique that allows for the en-bloc resection of large specimens and superficial gastrointestinal tumors thereby providing increased histological diagnosis and lower recurrence rates. However, ESD is challenging and while its application has rapidly spread as a therapeutic option, there is only limited data on the current practice and early experience of the United States. Aims: To evaluate the development of ESD in the United States by assessing the current practice and short-term outcomes of upper and lower ESD for the treatment of superficial gastrointestinal lesions. Methods: In a retrospective, multi-center study, we reviewed cases in which upper and lower ESD was used to treat superficial gastrointestinal lesions. ESD was completed in six institutions by 7 different endoscopists. Retrospective review of all cases was completed to obtain size and location of the lesion, pre-procedure indication, procedure time, instruments used, submucosal injection solutions, complications (e.g. bleeding, perforation) and follow up information when available. Results: A total of 304 ESD procedures were completed from the 6 centers. The mean case volume per center was 51 (range 11 - 84). The lesions treated by ESD were located in the stomach (n = 121), esophagus (n = 75), duodenum (n = 8), cecum (n = 6), right colon (n = 12), transverse colon (n = 7), sigmoid colon (n = 17), and rectum (n = 58). The mean lesion size was 38 mm (SD +/- 22.4 mm, range 6 - 150 mm). The indication for ESD resection was carcinoma in 30%, dysplasia in 59.2%, and benign lesions in 11%. En bloc resection was achieved in 78.0% of cases, with complete R0 resection in 56.3% of which 83 (27.3%) had positive margins (36 deep and 47 lateral) and 32 (10.5%) had lymphovascular or neural invasion. The median ESD procedure time was 120 minutes (range 25 - 600 minutes). The most frequent instruments used included the dual knife (33.0%) and IT knife (32.8%) with a combination of knives used in 51% of cases (mean 1.6 knives, +/- 0.7, range 1 - 4). APC was used in 16.5% of cases and preventative hemostasis was attempted in 86.2% of cases. Short-term morbidity was 14.1% included 13 cases of perforation (4.3%) and 30 hemorrhages (9.9%). With available follow up data, 31 patients (10.3%) subsequently had surgery and of these, 9 (29%) had disease in the surgical specimen. Of 146 patients (48%) who had a follow up endoscopy, 17 (11.6%) had residual disease. Conclusion: ESD is rapidly emerging as a popular technique in the United States to remove superficial gastrointestinal lesions. These findings confirm that ESD is technically feasible and safe. The challenging technique, steep learning curve, and need for optimal lesion selection highlight the need for significant practice in order achieve curative resection
EMBASE:72293274
ISSN: 1097-6779
CID: 2150282

Difficult Biliary Access: Advanced Cannulation and Sphincterotomy Technique

Mammen, Anish; Haber, Gregory
Many devices and techniques have been developed to assist in cases of difficult biliary cannulation. Guidewire-assisted cannulation has become the first-line technique for biliary cannulation. Precut sphincterotomy can be safe and effective if used soon after encountering difficulty. Pancreatic duct stents are an important adjunct to reduce the risk of post-endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography pancreatitis in difficult access. Ultimately, cannulation success of greater than 95% and complication rates of less than 5% is the standard that endoscopists doing ERCP should achieve.
PMID: 26431594
ISSN: 1558-1950
CID: 1860062

Anchor technique: prevention of intraluminal stent migration with the help of loop and clips

Kothari, Truptesh H; Yu, Christine; Haber, Gregory B
PMID: 25442076
ISSN: 1097-6779
CID: 1860072

A second chance at EMR: the avulsion technique to complete resection within areas of submucosal fibrosis

Bassan, Milan S; Cirocco, Maria; Kandel, Gabor; May, Gary R; Kortan, Paul P; Haber, Gregory B; Marcon, Norman E
PMID: 25028269
ISSN: 1097-6779
CID: 1860092

Increased Detection of Barrett's Esophagus (BE)-Associated Neoplasia Using Wide-Area Trans-Epithelial Sampling in Conjunction With 4-Quadrant Biopsies: Interim Results From a Multi-Center, Prospective, Randomized Trial [Meeting Abstract]

Vennalaganti, Prashanth; Eisen, Glenn; Falk, Gary W; Gerson, Lauren B; Gross, Seth A; Goldblum, John R; Gupta, Neil; Haber, Gregory B; Infantolino, Anthony; Iyer, Prasad G; Johnson, David A; Kaul, Vivek; Kothari, Shivangi; Lightdale, Charles J; Shaheen, Nicholas J; Smith, Michael S; Schnoll-Sussman, Felice; Wang, Kenneth K; Zhang, Yaxia; Sharma, Prateek
ISI:000360115800499
ISSN: 1528-0012
CID: 1861812

Endoscopic closure of a gastropleural fistula

Mendoza Ladd, Antonio; Al-Bayati, Ihsan; Shah, Paresh; Haber, Gregory
PMID: 25857475
ISSN: 1438-8812
CID: 1568642

Training the next generation of Western endoscopists in endoscopic submucosal dissection

Kumta, Nikhil A; Yamamoto, Hironori; Haber, Gregory B
PMID: 25220512
ISSN: 1097-6779
CID: 1860082

Per-oral endoscopic myotomy white paper summary

Stavropoulos, Stavros N; Desilets, David J; Fuchs, Karl-Hermann; Gostout, Christopher J; Haber, Gregory; Inoue, Haruhiro; Kochman, Michael L; Modayil, Rani; Savides, Thomas; Scott, Daniel J; Swanstrom, Lee L; Vassiliou, Melina C
PMID: 24935204
ISSN: 1432-2218
CID: 1860122

Avulsion: a novel technique to achieve complete resection of difficult colon polyps

Andrawes, Sherif; Haber, Gregory
PMID: 24950646
ISSN: 1097-6779
CID: 1860102

Per-oral endoscopic myotomy white paper summary

Stavropoulos, Stavros N; Desilets, David J; Fuchs, Karl-Hermann; Gostout, Christopher J; Haber, Gregory; Inoue, Haruhiro; Kochman, Michael L; Modayil, Rani; Savides, Thomas; Scott, Daniel J; Swanstrom, Lee L; Vassiliou, Melina C
PMID: 24950639
ISSN: 1097-6779
CID: 1860112