Do available data support the widespread adoption of pancreatoscopy guided-lithotripsy?

2020 
Peroral pancreatoscopy (POPS) is a demanding endoscopic procedure that can be used to perform intracanal lithotripsy in obstructing pancreatic stones but the experience is limited. Most stones can be removed successfully by endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography but patients with large stones require advanced therapeutic approaches, such as extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (alone or followed by endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography), currently the mainstay of treatment. Unfortunately, in about 10% of cases, extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy can fail; moreover, it is not be available in many institutions. For this subgroup of patients, POPS guided-lithotripsy can play a role and have benefits. The most consistent study concerns a retrospective multicenter analysis that enrolled few patients per center. Considering the epidemiological scenario and the scant volume of skilled endoscopists, POPS must be developed in very few high-volume referral centers with standardized pathways and capable of performing multi-modality treatment. In addition, we could reasonably assume that POPS-guided-lithotripsy should be used as rescue therapy in special situations, identifying the ideal candidate who can achieve the maximum clinical result, and carefully balancing risk/benefits ratio.
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