RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Selective biliary cannulation (SBC) is the first challenge of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), especially for trainees, and a rotatable sphincterotome may be useful to guide the directional axis of the scope and SBC. METHODS: We performed a prospective randomized single-center trial, enrolling 200 patients with a native papilla who required therapeutic biliary ERCP. Patients were randomly assigned to the rotatable sphincterotome group (nâ=â100) or the conventional sphincterotome group (nâ=â100). The primary endpoint was successful SBC by the trainees within 10 minutes. RESULTS: The early and late cannulation success rates did not differ significantly between the groups (Pâ=â0.46 and Pâ>â0.99, respectively). For the patients in whom trainees failed to achieve SBC, the rotatable sphincterotome was used as a rescue cannulation technique in four patients from the conventional group; in no patients in the rotatable group was the conventional sphincterotome used for SBC. Post-ERCP pancreatitis (PEP) occurred in 11 patients (5.5â%; 6 mild, 5 moderate); the incidence did not differ significantly between the two groups (rotatable group 3â%, conventional group 8â%; Pâ=â0.21). The two groups were thus combined for evaluation of the factors relating to cannulation difficulty for trainees, which revealed that orientation of the papilla was a significant factor (Pâ<â0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The type of sphincterotome used did not affect the success of SBC by trainees. However, orientation of the papilla was revealed to be a significant factor relating to cannulation difficulty for trainees overall.