Evidence Report/Technology Assessment: Number 50

Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography

Summary


Under its Evidence-based Practice Program, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) is developing scientific information for other agencies and organizations on which to base clinical guidelines, performance measures, and other quality improvement tools. Contractor institutions review all relevant scientific literature on assigned clinical care topics and produce evidence reports and technology assessments, conduct research on methodologies and the effectiveness of their implementation, and participate in technical assistance activities.

Select for PDF version (58 KB). PDF Help.

Overview / Reporting the Evidence / Methodology / Findings / Future Research / Availability of the Full Report


Overview

Diseases of the pancreas and biliary tree are common in the United States. An estimated 6 per 100,000 people are afflicted with common bile duct stones, representing only a small fraction of those with gallstones. There are approximately 57,400 newly diagnosed cases of malignancy of the pancreas, gallbladder, or extrahepatic biliary tract each year, and the prognosis is usually poor. Pancreatitis can occur in an acute, acute recurrent, or chronic pattern, with common etiologic factors including alcohol consumption and choledocholithiasis.

This report is the product of a systematic literature review of the evidence on the diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness of endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (ERCP) focusing on four clinical conditions:

In addition, the evidence describing patient, procedure, or operator determinants of complications of ERCP is systematically reviewed. The evidence on the prediction of common bile duct stones is reviewed as well.

Return to Contents

Reporting the Evidence

The clinical topic areas addressed in this evidence report were developed by the planning committee for the National Institutes of Health State-of-the-Science Conference (January 2002) on Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography. For each major topic, there are several key questions that address the most pertinent diagnostic and therapeutic issues.

Topic 1. Patients with Known or Suspected Common Bile Duct Stones

a. What is the diagnostic performance of ERCP in detecting common bile duct stones in comparison to alternatives? Alternatives include endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP), or computed tomography cholangiography (CTC).

b. What are the outcomes of treatment using ERCP strategies compared to using surgical or medical management?

c. What is the diagnostic value of specific risk factors or predictive models for assessing the likelihood of having a common bile duct stone?

Topic 2. Patients with Known or Suspected Pancreaticobiliary Malignancy

a. What is the comparative diagnostic performance of ERCP tissue sampling techniques in establishing a tissue biopsy diagnosis of pancreaticobiliary malignancy, and how do these techniques compare to alternative nonsurgical tissue sampling techniques (e.g., endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) or percutaneous FNA)?

b. What is the diagnostic performance of ERCP in diagnosing the presence of malignant pancreaticobiliary obstruction in comparison to other imaging alternatives (e.g., EUS or MRCP)?

c. What are the outcomes of treatment using ERCP strategies to treat malignant pancreaticobiliary obstruction compared to using surgical or interventional radiology treatment?

Topic 3. Patients with Pancreatitis

a. What is the diagnostic performance of ERCP in detecting underlying causes or complications of pancreatitis that are amenable to treatment in comparison to alternatives (e.g., EUS or MRCP)?

b. What are the outcomes of treatment using ERCP strategies compared to using surgical or medical therapy?

Topic 4. Patients with Abdominal Pain of Possible Pancreaticobiliary Origin

a. What is the diagnostic performance of ERCP with sphincter of Oddi manometry in identifying a pancreaticobiliary origin of pain in comparison to alternatives (e.g., biliary scintigraphy, EUS, or MRCP)?

b. What are the outcomes of treatment using ERCP strategies compared to using surgical or medical therapy?

Topic 5. What Patient, Procedure, or Operator Factors Are Determinants of Complications of ERCP?

Return to Contents

Methodology

The protocol for this review was designed prospectively to define study objectives, search strategy, patient populations of interest, study selection criteria, outcomes of interest, data elements to be abstracted and methods for abstraction, and methods for study quality assessment.

One reviewer performed primary data abstraction of all data elements into the evidence tables, and a second reviewer checked accuracy of the evidence tables. Disagreements were resolved between the two reviewers, or if necessary, in consultation with the Evidence-based Practice Center Director or members of the Technical Advisory Group.

Search Strategy for the Identification of Articles

The National Library of Medicine (NLM) staff conducted a comprehensive literature search for journal articles on ERCP from the PubMed®/MEDLINE®, BIOSIS, EMBASE, and SciSearch® databases with a publication date from 1980 through August 13, 2001. Articles which had been indexed to the NLM Medical Subject Heading (MeSH®) "cholangiopancreatography, endoscopic retrograde" as well as those containing the following list of ERCP synonyms and textword combinations were retrieved:

The "?" is a truncation symbol used to permit retrieval for variant word endings, as cholangiopancreatography, cholangiopancreatographic, etc.

Excluded from the search results were articles that:

The literature search for Topic 1c on prediction of common bile duct stones and for additional studies selected by the secondary selection criteria for Topics 3 and 4 used a streamlined search process to identify key articles addressing the clinical issue of interest. Reference lists from these articles were reviewed, focused MEDLINE searches were performed, and related articles were identified.

The Technical Advisory Group and peer reviewers for this project were asked to inform the project team of any studies relevant to the key questions addressed in this evidence report that were not retrieved by either of the search strategies.

Search Results

The online searches of the PubMed, EMBASE, BIOSIS, and SciSearch databases in conjunction with additional citations identified through manual searching yielded a total of 5,698 titles and abstracts for review. Based on review of abstracts, 789 articles were selected for review in full text. Approximately 117 of these articles were excluded as review articles. Primary and secondary selection criteria were applied to articles identified as potential clinical trial reports. This process yielded a total of 149 included studies for the review of evidence.

Study Selection Criteria

Primary Selection Criteria

The selection criteria for all topics in this report were:

  1. Full-length report in peer-reviewed medical journals.
  2. Published in English.
  3. Reported outcomes relevant to this systematic review.
  4. Where there were multiple reports of a single study, only the report judged to be most recent and complete, based on number of included patients and length of followup, was included. If additional relevant outcomes were included in the duplicate reports, these data were abstracted and added to the data from the primary report with citation to the supplementary articles.
  5. Prospective in design, or if retrospective, enrolled consecutive patients or used appropriate sampling methods (e.g., case-control sampling method).

To keep readers informed of ongoing studies, studies published only in abstract form since 1999 and judged to be important are noted in this systematic review. Data were not abstracted into the evidence tables.

Studies of diagnostic performance met the following additional selection criteria:

  1. Compared ERCP and at least one of the relevant diagnostic alternatives or compared two ERCP alternatives.
  2. Subjected at least 90 percent of participants to both ERCP and the relevant diagnostic alternative.
  3. Addressed a relevant patient population.
  4. Included at least 25 subjects.
  5. Reported sufficient information to be able to calculate 2x2 contingency tables of diagnostic performance.

Studies of therapeutic outcomes met the following additional selection criteria:

  1. Compared ERCP strategies with at least one of the relevant therapeutic alternatives.
  2. Addressed a relevant patient population.
  3. Included at least 25 subjects in each treatment group being analyzed separately.
  4. Reported on at least one relevant outcome measure.
  5. Was a contemporaneous comparison study. If not contemporaneous, the populations and treatment setting were comparable.

Studies of predictors of ERCP complications met the following additional selection criteria:

Studies on the prediction of common bile duct stones met the following additional selection criteria:

Secondary Selection Criteria

There was a paucity of literature that met the primary selection criteria for questions on ERCP treatment of chronic pancreatitis (Topic 3b) and ERCP treatment of chronic abdominal pain of possible pancreaticobiliary origin (Topic 4b). To examine these questions, the original study selection criteria were relaxed for these topics to include:

  1. Randomized controlled trials or otherwise concurrently controlled studies of an ERCP intervention compared to a relevant therapeutic alternative, regardless of sample size for pancreatitis.
  2. Single arm pre-post-intervention studies which selected a well-defined population with a predictable natural history ascertained by baseline evaluation over 3 months. These studies must also have used an appropriate well-designed outcome measure over at least 6 months of followup.

Outcomes of Interest

For diagnostic performance studies, the outcomes of interest were test performance characteristics (i.e., sensitivity, specificity) in diagnosing clinically relevant findings.

For therapeutic outcome studies, the primary outcomes of interest include:

  1. Measures of technical success (e.g., removal of stone, relief of obstruction, cyst drainage, need for repeat procedure or placement of stent).
  2. Measures of clinical success (e.g., survival, quality of life, performance scores, relief of jaundice, relief of infection, symptom scores, or pain scores).
  3. Resource utilization (e.g., hospitalization, perioperative care, return to work, intensity of post-procedure care).
  4. Procedure-related morbidity (e.g., stent-related problems, cholangitis, sepsis, sedation-related outcomes, bleeding, perforation, pancreatitis, long-term effects of sphincterotomy, mortality).

For studies of factors predicting ERCP complications, the primary outcomes of interest were measures of relative risk or predictive value associated with patient, procedure, or operator factors.

Study Quality Assessment

The approach to assessing the quality of evidence used domains commonly recognized as important in the literature on study quality. Quality criteria were developed for each of the three types of studies included in this systematic review:

For many topics addressed in this evidence review, studies meeting the most rigorous standards of quality do not exist. Thus, the main purpose of quality assessment in this systematic review is to discriminate between the better and lesser quality studies in the available evidence base.

For studies of therapeutic efficacy, the approach to quality assessment was adapted from that of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Study quality domains of interest were:

A study was rated as "Good" if it clearly met all quality parameters. A study was rated "Fair" if it reasonably met these parameters and had no fatal flaw. A study was rated "Poor" if it was fatally flawed on one or more parameters (e.g, if comparable groups were not assembled or maintained or outcome measures were invalid or not applied equally among groups).

For studies of diagnostic performance, criteria for assessing study quality were developed using key references in the field of study quality assessment. The selection criteria used for this systematic review eliminated poor quality studies from inclusion. Study quality domains of interest to discriminate between good and fair quality studies were: enrollment of representative subjects (includes appropriate spectrum of patients, unbiased enrollment, complete enrollment of eligible patients, accounting for all eligible subjects); ERCP interpreted independently of diagnostic alternative; and diagnostic alternative interpreted independently from ERCP. As relevant, issues of suitability and interpretation of reference standards are addressed qualitatively in the discussion of each question.

For multivariable logistic regression analysis studies, the quality domains of interest were the degree of over-fitting present in the multivariable models, the nature of statistical reporting, and the use of procedures to establish internal validity. Degree of over-fitting was assessed using the ratio of the number of endpoints divided by the number of candidate variables in the model; and were classified as: satisfactory (ratio >10) to severe (ratio <4).

Return to Contents

Findings

Topic 1. Patients with known or suspected common bile duct stones

Diagnostic Performance of ERCP Compared to Alternatives

ERCP Treatment Strategies Compared to Surgical or Medical Management

Diagnostic Value of Specific Risk Factors or Predictive Models for Assessing the Likelihood of Having A Common Bile Duct Stone

Topic 2. Patients with Known or Suspected Pancreaticobiliary Malignancy

Diagnostic performance of ERCP Tissue Sampling Techniques In Establishing A Tissue Biopsy Diagnosis of Pancreaticobiliary Malignancy Compared To Each Other and To Alternative Nonsurgical Tissue Sampling Techniques

Diagnostic Performance of ERCP Compared to Alternatives in Detecting Malignant Pancreaticobiliary Obstruction

Treatment Outcomes Using ERCP Strategies To Treat Malignant Pancreaticobiliary Obstruction Compared To Using Surgical or Interventional Radiology Treatment

Topic 3. Patients with Pancreatitis

Diagnostic Performance of ERCP Compared To Alternatives To Detect Underlying Causes or Complications of Pancreatitis That Are Amenable To Treatment

Treatment Outcomes of ERCP Strategies Compared To Surgical or Medical Therapy

Topic 4. Patients with Abdominal Pain of Possible Pancreaticobiliary Origin

Diagnostic Performance of ERCP with Sphincter of Oddi Manometry Compared with Alternatives To Identify A Pancreaticobiliary Origin of Pain

Treatment Outcomes of ERCP Strategies Compared To Surgical or Medical Therapy

Topic 5. What Patient, Procedure, or Operator Factors are Determinants of Complications of ERCP?

Return to Contents

Future Research

Recommendations for future research include the following:

Return to Contents

Availability of Full Report

The full evidence report from which this summary was derived was prepared for AHRQ by the Technology Evaluation Center under contract number 290-97-001-5. Printed copies may be obtained free of charge from the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse or by calling 1-800-358-9295. Requestors should ask for Evidence Report/Technology Assessment No. 50, Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography.

The Evidence Report is also online on the National Library of Medicine Bookshelf, or can be downloaded as a set of PDF files or as a zipped file.

Return to Contents

AHRQ Publication Number 02-E008
Current as of January 2002


Internet Citation:

Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography. Summary, Evidence Report/Technology Assessment: Number 50. AHRQ Publication No. 02-E008, January 2002. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/epcsums/ercpsum.htm.


Return EPC Evidence Reports
Clinical Information
AHRQ Home Page
Department of Health and Human Services