Anastomotic Leakages after Surgery for Gastroesophageal Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis on Endoscopic versus Surgical Management

Introduction: With the increase of esophageal and gastric cancer, surgery will be more often performed. Anastomotic leakage (AL) is one of the most feared postoperative complications of gastroesophageal surgery. It can be managed by conservative, endoscopic (such as endoscopic vacuum therapy and stenting), or surgical methods, but optimal treatment remains controversial. The aim of our meta-analysis was to compare (a) endoscopic and surgical interventions and (b) different endoscopic treatments for AL following gastroesophageal cancer surgery. Methods: Systematic review and meta-analysis, with search in three online databases for studies evaluating surgical and endoscopic treatments for AL following gastroesophageal cancer surgery. Results: A total of 32 studies comprising 1,080 patients were included. Compared with surgical intervention, endoscopic treatment presented similar clinical success, hospital length of stay, and intensive care unit length of stay, but lower in-hospital mortality (6.4% [95% CI: 3.8–9.6%] vs. 35.8% [95% CI: 23.9–48.5%]. Endoscopic vacuum therapy was associated with a lower rate of complications (OR 0.348 [95% CI: 0.127–0.954]), shorter ICU length of stay (mean difference −14.77 days [95% CI: −26.57 to −2.98]), and time until AL resolution (17.6 days [95% CI: 14.1–21.2] vs. 39.4 days [95% CI: 27.0–51.8]) when compared with stenting, but there were no significant differences in terms of clinical success, mortality, reinterventions, or hospital length of stay. Conclusions: Endoscopic treatment, in particular endoscopic vacuum therapy, seems safer and more effective when compared with surgery. However, more robust comparative studies are needed, especially for clarifying which is the best treatment in specific situations (according to patient and leak characteristics).

© 2023 The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel

Deiscência anastomótica · Cancro gastroesofágico · Tratamento cirúrgico · Tratamento endoscópico ·

Introdução: Com o aumento da incidência de cancro esofágico e gástrico, a cirurgia será mais frequentemente realizada. As deiscências anastomóticas (DA) são uma das complicações pós-operatórias mais temidas da cirurgia gastroesofágica. Podem ser tratadas com métodos conservadores, endoscópicos (como terapêutica endoscópica por vácuo e colocação de próteses) ou cirúrgicos, mas a melhor abordagem ainda é controversa. O objetivo da nossa meta-análise foi a comparação a) entre intervenções endoscópicas e cirúrgicas e b) entre diferentes tratamentos endoscópicos para a DA após cirurgia oncológica gastroesofágica. Métodos: Revisão sistemática e meta-análise, com pesquisa em 3 bases de dados online de estudos que avaliassem tratamentos cirúrgicos e endoscópicos da DA após cirurgia oncológica gastroesofágica. Resultados: Um total de 32 estudos englobando 1,080 pacientes foram incluídos. Comparativamente à intervenção cirúrgica, o tratamento endoscópico apresentou sucesso clínico, duração do internamento hospitalar e do internamento na unidade de cuidados intensivos semelhantes, mas menor mortalidade intra-hospitalar (6.4% [95% CI: 3.8–9.6%] vs. 35.8% [95% CI: 23.9–48.5%]). A terapêutica endoscópica por vácuo associou-se a menor taxa de complicações (OR 0.348 [95% CI: 0.127–0.954]), menor duração do internamento na UCI (diferença média −14.77 dias [95% CI: −26.57 to −2.98]) e do tempo até resolução da DA (17.6 dias [95% CI: 14.1–21.2] vs. 39.4 dias [95% CI: 27.0–51.8]) quando comparada com as próteses endoscópicas, mas não houve diferenças significativas em termos de sucesso clínico, mortalidade, reintervenções ou duração do internamento hospitalar. Conclusões: O tratamento endoscópico, em particular a terapêutica endoscópica por vácuo parece ser mais segura e efetiva em comparação com a cirurgia. Porém, estudos comparativos mais robustos são necessários, especialmente para clarificar qual o melhor tratamento em situações específicas (consoante as caraterísticas do paciente e da deiscência).

Introduction

Surgical treatment of esophagogastric cancer is associated with significant mortality and morbidity rates. Esophagectomy’s mortality and morbidity are reported to be as high as 3.8–4.5% and 24.0–44.9%, respectively [1-3]. Gastrectomy for gastric cancer carries a mortality of 4.1–4.7% and a morbidity of 23.6–36.0% [4, 5].

Anastomotic leakage (AL) is one of the most feared postoperative complications of gastroesophageal surgery owing to its association with prolonged hospital stay, increased mortality, and reduced quality of life [6-9]. In recent decades, improving of surgical techniques and better management of postoperative complications led to a decrease of those outcomes [10, 11], although this adverse event is still frequent, with AL incidence rates ranging from 0 to 49% following esophagectomy [12] and from 2.1 to 14.6% after gastrectomy [13].

AL can be managed by conservative (which includes fasting, nutritional support, antibiotic therapy, and wound drainage), endoscopic (clips, stents, tissue adhesives, or endoscopic vacuum therapy [EVT]), or surgical methods (primary closure of the leak, reanastomosis, or resection of the conduit). Currently, treatment decision is usually based on the characteristics of the leakage and the patient’s clinical condition, but optimal treatment remains controversial [13-15]. In the past, surgery was the treatment of choice, although it carries a higher mortality rate and nowadays is mostly used in cases of severe sepsis, large defects, or when other treatments failed or are not available/indicated.

Conservative treatment can be an option in clinically stable patients with small leakages [13, 14]. More recently, endoscopic techniques for AL were developed and appear to be safer than surgical reintervention [13, 14]. Recent systematic reviews comparing stenting with EVT found that the latter was associated with higher rate of AL closure and lower mortality [16-19]. Other endoscopic methods have also been reported as safe and effective, but most of this evidence results from small case series [13, 16]. Thus, it is unclear which is the optimal strategy for endoscopic treatment of AL after oncological gastric or esophageal surgery. Moreover, the comparison of endoscopic and surgical treatments for AL is important to confirm if endoscopic treatment should be the first-line strategy. The aims of this meta-analysis were to compare the outcomes of endoscopic and surgical treatments for AL following surgery for both esophageal and gastric cancer and to compare the outcomes of the different endoscopic methods.

Methods

This meta-analysis was performed according to the guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses checklist [20]. Since we performed a systematic review, no institutional board review approval or written consent was obtained.

Search Strategy

To identify published literature, a systematic search strategy was performed using 3 electronic databases (MEDLINE through PubMed, ISI Web of Knowledge, and Scopus), with last search performed on 2nd September 2020. No language or publication date restrictions were imposed. The search query for PubMed was (“anastomotic leak” OR “anastomotic dehiscence” OR “anastomosis dehiscence” OR “anastomotic fistula”) AND (gastric OR stomach OR esophag* OR oesophag* OR gastroesophageal OR “upper gastrointestinal tract”) AND (endoscopy OR “endoscopic management” OR “OTSC” OR stent OR sponge OR esophagectomy OR gastrectomy).

In addition, reference lists of review articles on the topic were searched to identify additional studies. We contacted all authors of studies that did not present the data as per inclusion criteria. Studies from authors that did not answer were not included in the quantitative analysis.

Study Selection

Studies were reviewed initially based on title and abstract by two independent investigators (I.A. and R.O). The full text of the included studies was then independently screened by the same two investigators according to the criteria below. A third author (D.L.) intervened in case of disagreement. The reasons for excluding studies were recorded. This phase was performed with Rayyan online platform. We included (1) randomized controlled trials, case-control or cohort studies (prospective or retrospective), and case series; (2) including patients who underwent endoscopic or surgical interventions as the first treatment for an AL following a gastroesophageal cancer surgery; (3) and evaluating the success of the endoscopic and surgical interventions in terms of at least one of the primary or secondary outcomes mentioned below. Studies were excluded if they were (1) review articles, editorials, comments, letters, and surveys; (2) case reports; (3) animal studies; (4) if they included fewer than 10 patients who met the eligibility criteria; or (5) if there was population overlap between studies. In this last case, only the study with the largest sample or study period was included.

Outcomes

The primary outcomes were (a) clinical success (defined as a complete closure of the AL, confirmed by upper endoscopy or imaging exam, with no need for reintervention and no death occurring as a consequence of the AL or its treatment, during follow-up); (b) in-hospital mortality (overall and treatment-related mortality). Secondary outcomes were rate of technical success (defined as a successful application of the chosen therapy), rate of endoscopic and surgical reintervention, rate of complications, hospital, and intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay, time until AL resolution and time until oral intake.

Data Collection

Data were extracted and recorded on an electronic data extraction sheet by two independent investigators (I.A. and R.O). Disagreements were solved by consensus. We retrieved information about: (1) study (title, first author, year of publication, country of origin, study period, study design, number of participants, number of patients with AL, and risk of bias); (2) participants (age, gender, and comorbidities); (3) tumor characteristics (location, staging, neoadjuvant therapy and type of resection, and reconstruction); (4) AL characteristics (time between surgery and AL diagnosis, modality of diagnosis, location, and dimensions of AL); (5) interventions (number of patients treated with each endoscopic and surgical method, time between cancer surgery or AL diagnosis and treatment, characteristics of each treatment), and (6) the aforementioned outcomes.

Assessment of Methodological Quality

The risk of bias within studies was evaluated by I.A. using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale for cohort studies and independently checked by R.O. Disagreements were solved by consensus. We also assessed the existence of publication bias by visual inspection of funnel plots and using the Egger’s test for primary outcomes.

Statistical Analysis

We performed a meta-analysis including all studies (single-arm or double-arm) presenting data allowing the calculation of pooled prevalence (for categorical variables) and weighted mean (for continuous variables), using random-effects model with MetaXL 5.3. Double-arm comparative studies were analyzed through calculation of odds ratio (OR) and weighted mean differences (WMD). Heterogeneity between studies was tested using I2 statistic and Cochran’s Q test. Significant heterogeneity was defined as I2 >40% and/or p < 0.05. Subgroup analysis was conducted to explore potential sources of heterogeneity according to (a) tumor location (esophageal vs. gastric) and (b) mortality definition (overall mortality vs. treatment-related mortality). Sensitivity analyses were also conducted in case of important definition and/or technical differences between studies and presence of outliers.

ResultsStudy Selection, Study Characteristics, and Quality Evaluation

After removing 2,382 duplicates, 2,733 titles and abstracts were screened, and 126 articles underwent full-text assessment, of which 32 were included in the systematic review (Fig. 1) [21-52]. We also checked the reference list of previous systematic reviews on the topic but found no further relevant studies.

Fig. 1.

Flow diagram of study selection according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses.

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General characteristics of the included studies (29 retrospective and 3 prospective) are shown in Table 1. Details regarding demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients are presented in online supplementary Table 1 (see www.karger.com/doi/10.1159/000527769 for all online suppl. material). Twenty-one of the included studies (65.6%) evaluated endoscopic treatment [21-25, 28-30, 32-36, 41-44, 46, 49, 50, 52], 3 (9.4%) focused on surgical intervention [37, 38, 47], and 8 (25.0%) evaluated both types of intervention [26, 27, 31, 39, 40, 45, 48, 51].

Table 1.

General characteristics and quality evaluation of the included studies

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Overall, 936 patients were treated with endoscopic methods, including 533 with stent placement (22 studies) [21-23, 25-31, 33, 34, 36, 40-43, 45, 48, 50-52], 133 with EVT (6 studies) [22, 33, 44, 46, 48, 49], 70 with clips (3 studies) [21, 43, 45, 50], 14 with fibrin glue (2 studies) [34, 50], 86 with argon plasma coagulation (1 study) [43], and 45 with multimodal interventions (3 studies) [24, 39, 41]. In 75 patients across 4 studies, the outcomes of different endoscopic treatments were evaluated together [31, 32, 35, 50]. Regarding stent placement, most studies used self-expanded metal stents, which were fully covered in the majority of the patients. Meta-analysis comparing partially and fully covered metal stents was not performed due to the low number of studies evaluating outcomes separately. Details about the endoscopic treatment are summarized in online supplementary Table 2.

A total of 144 patients were treated with surgical interventions, including 13 with anastomosis disassembly and ostomy (3 studies) [27, 31, 47], 17 with suture of anastomosis (3 studies) [37, 38, 40], 20 with reanastomosis (3 studies) [31, 45, 47], and 19 with other surgical interventions (3 studies) [31, 38, 47]. In 75 patients across 4 studies, the outcomes of different surgical treatments were evaluated together [26, 39, 48, 51].

Methodological quality of the included studies is described in Table 1. The median Newcastle-Ottawa score was 6 (IQR 5–6). Funnel plots and Egger’s test did not show evidence of publication bias when evaluating in-hospital mortality after endoscopic (p = 0.410) and surgical treatment (p = 0.169) and clinical success after endoscopic treatment (p = 0.053).

Surgical versus Endoscopic Treatment

Technical success was presented in 6 endoscopic studies, with 5 of them reporting a technical success of 100% [25, 27, 28, 32, 52] and the other presenting a rate of 92.9% [29]. Clinical success (leak closure rate) was similar in endoscopic and surgical studies (83.2% [95% CI: 77.0–88.6%] vs. 82.2% [95% CI: 67.7–93.3%]) (online suppl. Fig. 1; Table 2). However, overall in-hospital mortality was significantly higher in surgical studies than in endoscopic studies (35.8% [95% CI: 23.9–48.5%) vs. 6.4% [95% CI: 3.8–9.6%]) (Fig. 2; Table 2). Death directly due to adverse events of endoscopic treatment was described in 8 endoscopic studies, and the pooled treatment-related mortality was 1.4% (95% CI: 0.0–3.8%). Clinical success and mortality were similar when stratifying by lesion location (Table 2).

Table 2.

Primary outcomes according to treatment and tumor location

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Forest plot of in-hospital mortality according to treatment: (a) endoscopic treatment; (b) surgical treatment.

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After surgical treatment, there were no surgical reinterventions (0% [95% CI: 0–4.8%]) [26, 27, 31, 38-40, 45, 47]. After endoscopic treatment, the rate of surgical reintervention was 4.9% (95% CI: 2.7–7.6%) (online suppl. Fig. 2) [21-36, 39-42, 44-46, 49, 50, 52].

Surgical complications were presented in 3 studies, which reported development of stenosis, fistulae, and severe bleeding in 17.6% [47], 30.0% [38], and 2.9% [39] of the patients, respectively. Overall adverse events occurred in 26.6% of the patients treated with EVT or stenting (95% CI: 20.7–33.0%; detailed below).

There were no significant differences in terms of hospital or ICU length of stay (Table 3). Most studies defined hospital length of stay as time between cancer surgery and discharge. Sensitivity analysis excluding two studies with slightly different definitions of this outcome [30, 39] did not significantly affect the estimates.

Table 3.

Hospital and ICU length of stay according to treatment

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Time until AL resolution was only presented in 1 surgical study (50.1 ± 60.0 days) [38]. In endoscopic studies, mean time until AL resolution ranged from 12.0 to 63.4 days [22-26, 29, 30, 32, 33, 41, 42, 44, 46, 49, 50, 52].

EVT versus StentSingle-Arm Meta-Analysis

EVT, in comparison to stent, was associated with a nonsignificantly higher clinical success rate (91.3% [95% CI: 79.2–99.6%] vs. 81.5% [95% CI: 73.6–88.3%]) (Table 2) and a nonsignificantly lower in-hospital mortality rate (6.0% [95% CI: 1.8–11.4%] vs. 8.6% [95% CI: 4.6–13.4%]) (Table 2).

EVT was associated with a nonsignificantly lower rate of surgical reinterventions (1.8% [95% CI: 0–5.2.0%] vs. 5.7% [95% CI: 2.6–9.6%]), but a nonsignificantly higher rate of endoscopic reinterventions (8.3% [95% CI: 0–21.4%] vs. 4.0% [95% CI: 2.2–6.4%]) [21-23, 25-30, 33, 34, 36, 40-42, 44-46, 49, 50, 52]. Moreover, EVT required 1 to 18 sponges, while the number of stents ranged from 1 to 7 (online suppl. Table 2).

EVT and stenting complications are shown in Table 4. The overall complications rate, considering the occurrence of migration of endoscopic device, stenosis, severe bleeding, perforation, or fistulization, was nonsignificantly lower in the EVT group (14.0% [95% CI: 3.2–27.7%] vs. 32.6% [95% CI: 24.0–41.9%]) [21-23, 25, 26, 28-30, 33, 34, 36, 40-46, 49-52]. Sensitivity analysis, excluding an outlier (Feith et al. [28], 67.0% of overall complications after stenting), did not significantly affect the estimates. EVT was associated with a nonsignificantly lower migration rate compared to stenting. Sensitivity analysis excluding an outlier (Feith et al. [28], 53% migration after stent placement) did not significantly affect the estimates. Stenosis rate was nonsignificantly higher in the EVT group. Sensitivity analysis excluding two outliers (Min et al. [46], 35% stenosis after EVT; Ma et al. [43], 43% stenosis after stent placement) found that stenosis rate was similar in EVT and stent studies. Other adverse events (severe bleeding, perforation, and fistulization) were infrequent (<3.5%) and were similar in EVT and stent groups.

Table 4.

Complications according to treatment

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There were no significant differences in terms of hospital or ICU length of stay (Table 3). Freeman et al. [30], which included patients who underwent stent placement before being transferred from other facilities, reported a shorter hospital length of stay (9.0 days [95% CI: 7.2–10.8]); sensitivity analysis excluding this study did not significantly affect the estimates.

EVT was associated with a significantly shorter time until AL resolution compared with stenting (17.6 days [95% CI: 14.1–21.2] vs. 39.4 days [95% CI: 27.0–51.8]) (online suppl. Fig. 3) [22, 23, 28, 29, 33, 41, 42, 44, 46, 49, 50, 52]. Sensitivity analysis excluding an outlier (Freeman et al. [30], 12 days until AL resolution after stent placement) did not significantly affect the estimates. Mean time until oral intake, only reported in 4 stent studies, ranged between 1.7 and 28.8 days [25, 36, 40, 43].

Double-Arm Meta-Analysis

Meta-analysis of the studies directly comparing EVT with stent placement revealed that EVT was associated with nonsignificantly higher clinical success (OR 1.91 [95% CI: 0.47–7.79]) [22, 33], lower in-hospital mortality (OR 0.39 [95% CI: 0.13–1.18]) [22, 48], and lower endoscopic (OR 0.21 [95% CI: 0.02–1.88]) (online suppl. Fig. 4) and surgical (OR 0.45 [95% CI: 0.04–5.61]) reintervention rates [22, 33]. There were also nonsignificantly lower rates of migration of endoscopic device (OR 0.51 [95% CI: 0.17–1.55]) and stenosis (OR 0.58 [95% CI: 0.09–3.97]), but a significantly lower rate of overall complications in the EVT group (OR 0.35 [95% CI: 0.13–0.95]) (online suppl. Fig. 5) [22, 33].

EVT was associated with nonsignificantly shorter time until AL resolution (WMD –8.67 days [95% CI: −22.54 to 5.20]) [22, 33] and shorter hospital length of stay (WMD –12.98 days [−31.27 to 7.98]) (online suppl. Fig. 6) [22, 33, 48]. There was a significantly shorter ICU length of stay in the EVT group compared to the stent group (WMD –14.77 days [95% CI: −26.57 to −2.98]) (online suppl. Fig. 7) [22, 48].

Other Endoscopic Treatments

Some of the included studies focused on other endoscopic treatments besides stents and EVT, namely clips, fibrin glue, argon plasma coagulation, and multimodal modalities that were not included in meta-analysis due to the reduced number of studies on these treatments. There were no deaths directly related to any of these treatments. Clipping and fibrin glue had clinical success in 66.7% and 78.6% of the patients, respectively. Multimodal modalities had higher rates of clinical success ranging from 80.0% to 96.0%. Details on the outcomes of these treatments are shown in online supplementary Table 3.

Discussion

This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the efficacy of endoscopic and surgical interventions in the management of AL after gastroesophageal cancer surgery. Even though there have been some reviews regarding the treatment of AL, to our knowledge, this is the first meta-analysis simultaneously comparing (1) endoscopic versus surgical interventions and (2) EVT versus stent placement in this specific context.

Our results demonstrated that endoscopic treatment, in comparison to surgical intervention, was associated with a significantly lower in-hospital mortality rate. However, no significant differences were found between these treatments in terms of clinical success, surgical reinterventions, hospital length of stay, and ICU length of stay. The decreased mortality found in the endoscopic therapy group may be related with the lesser invasiveness of these therapies, although it is also possible that there are differences in the clinical status and/or dehiscence characteristics of the patients between the two groups that may contribute to this difference in mortality. For instance, Schweigert et al. [51] found that patients in the surgical group were generally in worse condition, being more frequently septic. A recent cohort study also concluded that AL with a more severe initial presentation (i.e., requiring operative management) was associated with a lower rate of primary management success [53]. In our meta-analysis, however, most studies did not present data on AL size or clinical status at presentation.

The use of stents for the treatment of postoperative esophagogastric AL has already been established [54]. However, recent systematic reviews have shown that EVT is associated with improved rates of AL closure, lower mortality, and lower rates of adverse events, when compared to stenting [16-19]. The differences we found, even though not always statistically significant, are consistent with the aforementioned previous literature.

We found a nonsignificantly higher clinical success rate and a nonsignificantly lower in-hospital mortality rate for EVT compared to stent placement. As EVT is a relatively new technique, it is possible that the first studies evaluating this method included patients in which a favorable outcome was expected (selection bias), thus influencing the results [16].

Our single-arm meta-analysis revealed no significant differences between EVT and stent placement in terms of reinterventions or complications. However, there was a significantly lower rate of overall complications in the EVT group, although this difference is mainly explained by a single study, which had a weight of 89.6% [22].

We found that EVT was associated with a significantly shorter time until AL resolution compared with stent placement. This might be due to the fact that, in EVT, sponges were changed frequently, usually every 72–120 h, until successful healing of the AL [22, 33, 44, 46, 49]. In contrast, the stents usually remain in place for 4–8 weeks until follow-up endoscopy with stent change or stent removal [27, 28]. Therefore, we cannot exactly ascertain the moment when AL closure was achieved in the case of stent placement. As pointed out by Scognamiglio et al. [16], a more adequate outcome parameter to measure the success of therapy would be the time until resolution of AL-associated symptoms or the time until start of oral nutrition. However, none of the studies reported time until resolution of AL-associated symptoms, but 4 stent studies presented the mean time until oral intake, which ranged from 1.7 to 28.8 days (lower than the reported time until to AL resolution).

As sponge changes are much more frequent than stent replacement, EVT requires a higher number of endoscopic devices and procedures. This offers the possibility to assess the wound regularly, which might help in detecting complications before their progression, which might contribute to the lower rate of overall complications in EVT studies. In addition, it allows endoscopic lavage and debridement at each sponge exchange, which has been shown to reduce pleural inflammation and leakage-associated mortality [55]. However, the higher number of endoscopic procedures and devices increases the cost of EVT, which has been shown to be twice the cost of stent placement [56]. Regarding hospital and ICU length of stay, there were no significant differences between EVT and stent placement in single-arm studies, although in comparative studies EVT was associated with a significantly shorter ICU length of stay compared to stenting.

Our study has some limitations. Included studies are mostly retrospective, single-arm, and/or include a small sample size. In addition, one problem that led to limited comparability of several outcomes was the fact that their definitions were heterogenous or absent in many studies. Another limitation was the heterogeneity found on most analyses that did not decrease when stratifying by tumor location. Variables such as presence of comorbidities, dimensions and location of AL, time until diagnosis, or time until treatment have differences between studies and may also contribute for heterogeneity. Moreover, whereas stent placement is quite standardized and reproducible, EVT procedure may differ between institutions in terms of the magnitude of negative pressure, interval between sponge changes and placement of the sponge (extra- or intraluminal). A fourth limitation refers to the relatively low number of EVT studies and patients, which may have led to underpowerment to detect existent differences.

In conclusion, we found that endoscopic treatment was associated with a lower in-hospital mortality compared to surgical intervention. EVT is associated with a lower rate of overall complications and a shorter ICU length of stay compared to stenting. Other differences, although not statistically significant, seemed to point to a greater suggest similar efficacy and better safety profile of endoscopic treatment when compared to surgical intervention and of EVT compared to stenting. These findings can help in the definition of standardized treatment algorithms.

Although EVT seems like a promising treatment, the lack of comparative studies and standardization of clinical conditions poses a challenge in making definite conclusions. Therefore, it is essential to develop more robust prospective randomized comparative studies with standardized interventions and outcomes in order to compare EVT with other modalities and define which is the best treatment in specific situations (according to patient and leak characteristics).

Statement of Ethics

Not applicable because this study is based exclusively on published literature.

Conflict of Interest Statement

Drs. Isabel Azevedo, Raquel Ortigão, Pedro Pimentel-Nunes, Pedro Bastos, and Diogo Libânio have no conflicts of interest or financial ties to disclose. Dr. Rui Silva has ties with Boston Scientific and Cook Medical. Dr. Mário Dinis-Ribeiro has ties with Medtronic, Boston, and Fujifilm.

Funding Sources

None declared.

Author Contributions

Dr. Isabel Azevedo was responsible for the conception of study design, study selection, data extraction, and writing of the manuscript. Dr. Raquel Ortigão contributed to the conception of study design, study selection, data extraction, and revision of the manuscript. Dr. Diogo Libânio contributed to the conception of study design, selection of studies, meta-analysis, and revision of the manuscript. Drs. Rui Silva and Mário Dinis-Ribeiro were involved in the conception of study design and revision of the manuscript. Drs. Pedro Pimentel-Nunes and Pedro Bastos were also involved in the revision of the manuscript.

Data Availability Statement

The data and forest plots generated during this study are included in this article and its supplementary material files or can be requested to the corresponding author on reasonable request.

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