Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3304026 | Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2013 | 4 Pages |
BackgroundThe tip of currently available percutaneous endoscopic gastrojejunostomy (PEGJ) tubes frequently migrates back into the stomach.ObjectiveTo study the safety of a novel, ballooned-tip, PEGJ tube and assess the risk of retrograde migration into the stomach within 3 weeks of placement.DesignProspective clinical study (NCT01551095).SettingTertiary-care center.PatientsSeven patients who required post-pyloric feeding were included.InterventionPlacement of PEGJ feeding tubes.Main Outcome MeasurementsPosition of the PEGJ, abdominal radiograph findings, adverse events.ResultsSeven patients underwent placement of self-propelled PEGJ tubes during the study period. Technical success was achieved in all patients (100%). All procedures were rated as technically simple, and jejunostomy tubes were placed in <5 minutes during all procedures. Abdominal radiographs showed that the jejunostomy tubes were in the jejunum in all 7 patients at both 1 and 3 weeks after tube placement.LimitationsSmall number of patients and short follow-up.ConclusionBallooned-tip PEGJ feeding tubes were safe and easy to place. The presence of the balloon prevented migration into the stomach. Ballooned-tip PEGJ tubes have the potential to eliminate the need for hospital readmission and repeat endoscopies for retrograde tube migration, and this may result in large systemic cost savings.