Repository logo
 
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Traqueoesophageal fistula patients fed through percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy/gastrojejunostomy: nutritional status and clinical outcome

Use this identifier to reference this record.
Name:Description:Size:Format: 
Artigo17_JFonseca.pdf302.17 KBAdobe PDF Download

Advisor(s)

Abstract(s)

"BACKGROUND: tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF) may result from cancer or mechanical ventilation. Endoscopic Gastrostomy or Gastrojejunostomy (PEG/PEG-J) is used for nutritional support. OBJECTIVE: in TEF-patients, evaluating nutritional status when PEG is performed, safety of PEG/PEG-J and clinical outcome. METHODS: from the files of PEG/PEG-J feed TEF-patients we collected: clinical data, Body Mass Index, albumin, transferrin and cholesterol when gastrostomy was performed, and clinical outcome globally and according with the TEF cause: Group 1: complication of mechanical ventilation, Group 2: cancer. RESULTS: twelve patients, 18-91 years (median: 53), 11 PEG, one PEG-J: six complications of ventilation (neurological diseases), 6 cancers. Mean period from TEF diagnosis until gastrostomy: 2 months in Group 1, 10 months in Group 2. In the day of the gastrostomy, patients presented with malnutrition parameters, most strikingly in the cancer group. Group 1: died a single patient, 3 closed the TEF, resuming oral intake, 2 are still PEG-feed. All cancer patients died (7 months after gastrostomy). One needed a jejunal extension to create a PEG-J. No more complications. CONCLUSION: PEG/PEG-J was safe in TEF-patients, but cancer patients underwent gastrostomy too late. In TEF-patients, PEG/PEG-J should be considered in a regular basis, earlier in the disease evolution, before established malnutrition."

Description

Keywords

Tracheoesophageal fistula Nutrition Gastrostomy Gastrojejunostomy PEG

Citation

Nutr Hosp. 2015;32(2):691-695

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Publisher

Aula Médica Ediciones

CC License

Altmetrics