Laparoscopic treatment of common bile duct stones

The standard treatment for patients with symptomatic gallstones is laparoscopic cholecystectomy
(LC). In patients undergoing LC the prevalence of common bile duct (CBD) stones ranges between 8%
and 15% and it increases with advancing age, reaching up to 60% in elderly patients. Every patient who
is candidate for LC should be evaluated for the presence of CBD stones and these should be treated if the
diagnosis is confirmed. In the literature, the procedure of choice for CBD stones treatment is still debated.
In many centers, pre- or postoperative endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) with
endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES) and LC (two-stage endo-laparoscopic management) is considered standard
practice instead of open choledocholithotomy and cholecystectomy. Laparoscopic single-stage management
of gallstones and CBD stones has demonstrated equivalent outcomes to the two-stage endo-laparoscopic
approach in randomized controlled trials but with shorter hospital stay and fewer interventions. Moreover,
the two-stage endo-laparoscopic management of CBD stones and gallstones may be associated with a
higher additional procedures rate, and possibly increased costs, as compared to single-stage laparoscopic
management. Another option is single-stage endo-laparoscopic management of gallstones and CBD stones,
performing ERCP/ES during the same LC anesthesia (so called, “Rendez-Vous” procedure). Excluding
patients with cholangitis, who should be managed by emergency ERCP with ES and stones removal, in the
elective setting the ultimate choice for one procedure or the other largely depends on the local resources
and expertise that are available in the individual center, notwithstanding the scientific evidence in favour of
single-stage laparoscopic management. The authors report the surgical techniques that they follow during
LC for CBD exploration and stones’ removal by laparoscopic trans-cystic or choledochotomy approach.

Responsabile del Gruppo

Alessandro Maria Paganini

© Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" - Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Roma