Abstract

Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) is a common technique for enteral nutrition support. Complications range from skin injuries and leakage to more severe intraabdominal pathologies. This case report describes a patient with invasive right lateral pharyngeal wall squamous cell carcinoma who developed a gastrocolocutaneous fistula following PEG tube malpositioning in the transverse colon performed at an outside institution. Based on the patient's comorbidities and the associated high-risk nature of the surgery, a transverse colectomy and partial gastrectomy to resect the malpositioned tube followed by a new PEG tube was deemed invasive and would likely have a poor clinical outcome. Instead, the surgeon performed a laparoscopic-assisted PEG tube insertion in another portion of the stomach. The fistulous tract of the original PEG tube was completely sealed and fell out one week following surgery. The patient tolerated feeds through the new PEG tube site. Gastrocolocutaneous fistulas are rare complications of PEG tube insertion with a poorly understood pathophysiology. Here, we analyze the root cause of this condition, steps to mitigate it, and a proposed novel surgical approach for its conservative management.

Publication Date

7-5-2024

Content Type

Article

PubMed ID:

39105023

Additional Authors:

Additional authors and institutional affiliations

Comments

This open access article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license. © 2024

Open Access

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