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Safety and efficacy of the endoscopic delivery of capsule endoscopes in adult and pediatric patients: Multicenter Japanese study (AdvanCE-J study).

Naoki OhmiyaShiro OkaYoshiko NakayamaItaru IwamaMasanao NakamuraHirotaka ShimizuAkihiko SumiokaNaoki AbeTakahiro KudoSatoshi OsawaHitoshi HonmaTakeru OkuhiraShoji MtsufujiHiroyuki ImaedaKazuhiro OtaRyo MatsuokaNaoki HottaMikihiro InoueKonosuke NakajiHiroyuki TakamaruKeiji OzekiTaku KobayashiNaoki HosoeHisao TajiriShinji Tanaka
Published in: Digestive endoscopy : official journal of the Japan Gastroenterological Endoscopy Society (2021)
Small bowel capsule endoscopies, PCs, and CCEs were endoscopically delivered to 546 (5.4%), 214 (6.7%), and 14 (1.0%) patients, respectively. Only mild complications occurred for 21.6% (167/774), including uneventful mucosal damage, bleeding, and abdominal pain. Successful ED of SBCE to the duodenum or jejunum occurred in 91.8% and 90.7% of patients aged <16 years and ≥16 years, respectively (P = 0.6661), but the total enteroscopy rate was higher in the first group (91.7%) than in the second (76.2%, P < 0.0001), for whom impossible ingestion (87.3%) was significantly more common than prolonged lodging in the stomach (64.2%, P = 0.0010). Successful PC and CCE delivery to the duodenum occurred in 84.1% and 28.6%, thereafter the patency confirmation rate and total colonoscopy rate was 100% and 61.5%, respectively. The height, weight, and age cutoff points in predicting spontaneous ingestion were 132 cm, 24.8 kg, and 9 years 2 months, respectively, in patients aged <16 years. Patients aged ≥16 years could not swallow the SBCEs mainly due to dysphagia (75.0%); those who retained it in the esophagus due to cardiac disease (28.6%), etc. and in the stomach due to diabetes mellitus (15.7%), etc. CONCLUSIONS: This large-scale study supports the safety and efficacy of ED in adult and pediatric patients. UMIN000042020.
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