Biliary strictures present a diagnostic challenge,especially when no etiology can be ascertained after laboratory evaluation,abdominal imaging and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography(ERCP)sampling.These str...Biliary strictures present a diagnostic challenge,especially when no etiology can be ascertained after laboratory evaluation,abdominal imaging and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography(ERCP)sampling.These strictures were traditionally classified as indeterminate strictures,although with advances in endoscopic techniques and better understanding of hepato-biliary pathology,more are being correctly diagnosed.The implications of missing a malignancy in patients with biliary strictures—and hence delaying surgery—are grave but a significant number of patients(up to 20%)undergoing surgery for suspected biliary malignancy can have benign pathology.The diagnostic approach to these patients involves detailed history and physical examination and depends on the presence or absence of jaundice,level of obstruction,and presence or absence of a mass lesion.While abdominal imaging helps to find the level of obstruction and provides a‘road map’for further endoscopic investigations,tissue diagnosis is usually needed to make decisions on management.Initially ERCP was the only modality to investigate these strictures but now,with the development of endoscopic ultrasound with fine needle aspiration and the availability of newer techniques such as intraductal ultrasound,single-operator cholangioscopy and confocal laser endomicroscopy,the diagnostic approach to biliary strictures has changed significantly.In this review,we will focus on the decision-making process for patients with biliary strictures and discuss the key decision points that should dictate further diagnostic investigations at each step.展开更多
文摘Biliary strictures present a diagnostic challenge,especially when no etiology can be ascertained after laboratory evaluation,abdominal imaging and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography(ERCP)sampling.These strictures were traditionally classified as indeterminate strictures,although with advances in endoscopic techniques and better understanding of hepato-biliary pathology,more are being correctly diagnosed.The implications of missing a malignancy in patients with biliary strictures—and hence delaying surgery—are grave but a significant number of patients(up to 20%)undergoing surgery for suspected biliary malignancy can have benign pathology.The diagnostic approach to these patients involves detailed history and physical examination and depends on the presence or absence of jaundice,level of obstruction,and presence or absence of a mass lesion.While abdominal imaging helps to find the level of obstruction and provides a‘road map’for further endoscopic investigations,tissue diagnosis is usually needed to make decisions on management.Initially ERCP was the only modality to investigate these strictures but now,with the development of endoscopic ultrasound with fine needle aspiration and the availability of newer techniques such as intraductal ultrasound,single-operator cholangioscopy and confocal laser endomicroscopy,the diagnostic approach to biliary strictures has changed significantly.In this review,we will focus on the decision-making process for patients with biliary strictures and discuss the key decision points that should dictate further diagnostic investigations at each step.