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Biliary strictures

From Surgopaedia

Workup for cholestatic pattern, with suspected stricture

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  • USS
  • MRI (CT considered better by some for distal duct obstruction)
  • FBE, CA19-9, CEA, IgG, IgG4, HIV
  • If still no clear cause, probably going to need ERCP



Benign biliary strictures - end result of either traumatic injury or inflammatory processes.

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Iatrogenic injury (most common cause)

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    • Usually cholecystectomy - see 'cholecystectomy' page for how to avoid, and classification (Strasberg)
    • Management
      • PTC and downstream dilatation
        • Use an angioplasty balloon catheter then leave a transhepatic stent
      • ERCP
      • Hepaticojejunostomy with transanastamotic stent, which stay in for 2-3 months
    • Specific situations
      • Strasberg A - ERCP and biliary stent placement
      • Strasberg B or C - often do not require operative intervention, but if they get recurrent sepsis/cholangitis, a right posterior hepatic sectionectomy is typically the best option
      • Strasberg D - variable - endoscopic vs IR dilation and stenting. Primary end to end will likely fail if it's a thermal injury due to fibrosis and retraction, so excising a portion of the duct and performing hepaticojejunostomy may be necessary.
      • Strasberg E - always requires biliary-enteric reconstruction
    • See separate topic

Recurrent pyogenic cholangitis

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    • A syndrome of repeated attacks of cholangitis secondary to biliary stones and strictures that involve the extra- and intra-hepatic ducts
      • Also known as oriental cholangiohepatitis or hepatolithiasis
    • Epidemiology
      • Almost exclusively seen in Asians (in Asia and diaspora)
      • Men and women equal
      • Most commonly strikes at 20-40yo in lower SES
    • Aetiology
      • Unknown
    • Pathophysiology
      • Stones and strictures develop in the biliary tree, but not known which occurs first
      • Stones are bilirubinate stones
      • Association with Clonorchis sinensis and Ascaris lumbricoides
      • Strictures usually involve the intrahepatic main hepatic ducts, most often the left hepatic duct
      • GB can be involved (20%)
    • Complications
      • Cirrhosis can develop secondary to strictures
      • Choledochoduodenal fistula
      • Acute pancreatitis
      • Increased incidence of cholangiocarcinoma
    • Presentation
      • Repeated bouts of cholangitis
    • Diagnosis
      • Favoured if there are multiple ductal stones, abscesses
      • Use combination of USS, CT and ERCP
    • Treatment
      • Acute
        • Focus on decompression
        • Surgical has historically been favoured - open CBD exploration or endoscopic papillotomy with stenting
        • PTC reserved for poor-risk surgical patients
      • Chronic
        • Surgery is often indicated
        • Hepatic resection if it's within an isolated segment (for intra-hepatic strictures, hepatic atrophy, liver abscess, or suspicion of cholangiocarcinoma)
        • All the way through to liver transplant
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    • A/w AIP
    • Most frequently presents as painless obstructive jaundice
    • Most widely-used diagnostic criteria are HISORt

Ischaemic cholangiopathy

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AIDS-associated cholangiopathy

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Secondary sclerosing cholangitis in critically ill patients

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Acute/chronic pancreatitis

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    • Pancreatic fibrosis results in distal biliary strictures involving the entire intra-pancreatic portion of CBD and causing proximal dilation
    • Serum ALP is most sensitive marker
    • Diagnosed on MRCP or ERCP (long, smooth, gradual tapering of distal CBD)
    • Need to exclude periampullary tumour
    • Treatment:
      • Most commonly biliary bypass - either choledochodeodenostomy or choledochojejunostomy
      • If malignancy can't be excluded, or chronic pain is a feature, pancreaticoduodenectomy is possible
      • Endoscopic therapy is generally not as good - can be trialled, but guidelines say if it's ineffective after 12 months, need surgery/hypass

Autoimmune pancreatitis

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    • Rare inflammatory disease almost uniformly responsive to steroids
    • Often have obstructive jaundice and pancreatic mass
    • Types
      • Type I - IgG4-related, relapsing, not limited to pancreas
      • Type II - limited to pancreas, rarely relapsing

Post-surgical biliary strictures

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  • Post-cholecystectomy
  • Post-liver transplantation

Malignant

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  • Pancreatic cancer
    • CA19-9 is best tumour marker, but can also do CEA
  • Cholangiocarcinoma



Features that support malignancy:

  • Long-segment
  • Irregular
  • Early enhancement
  • Associated soft tissue mass
  • Direct invasion/infiltrative features
  • DWI