By Katarina A. Lewczyk | Date published: December 16, 2024
![Physicians performing an endoscopic procedure](/contentassets/31abd6e5600e42048fca2c80bb41ddb8/adobestock_232794925.jpg)
Esophageal perforations can occur during endoscopic intervention and are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Although surgery is traditionally used to close large perforations, endoscopic alternatives offer promise.
In a recent article published in VideoGIE, Ikechukwu Achebe, MD, and Shiv Gandhi, MD, both gastroenterology fellows, Katherine Cooper, MD, an Internal Medicine resident, Prashanth Rau, MD, Navine Nasser-Ghodsi, MD, Neil Marya, MD, all assistant professors of medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology, and Eric Then, MD, an advanced endoscopy fellow, report on a patient case where endoscopic suturing was used to close a large esophageal perforation that would have otherwise required surgery. The team utilized various techniques including endoscopic clips, over-the-scope, and through-the-scope suturing to repair the perforation.
Nicole Cherng, MD, of General Surgery, was also involved in the patient's case.