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Dive into the research topics where Michel Baize is active.

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Featured researches published by Michel Baize.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 1988

Long-term follow-up of patients with hilar malignant stricture treated by endoscopic internal biliary drainage

Jacques Devière; Michel Baize; J. de Toeuf; Michel Cremer

Seventy patients with biliary obstruction secondary to hilar tumors underwent attempted endoscopic internal biliary drainage using large transpapillary stents between December 1981 and March 1986. Placement of one or more stents was successful in 68. The type of stricture and mode of treatment were more important in determining subsequent survival than the type of tumor. In type II and III malignant strictures of the bifurcation of the common hepatic duct and the main hepatic duct, use of two or more stents to achieve complete drainage of the biliary system improves survival compared to incomplete drainage (176 vs. 119 days) and reduces procedure-related mortality and the incidence of early and late cholangitis. Patients with hilar tumors causing type II and III strictures treated with placement of multiple stents have at least as good a prognosis as patients with tumor involving only the common hepatic duct treated with use of a single stent. Once ERCP is performed and palliative endoscopic management of bifurcation tumors is begun, it must completed as soon as possible.


Gastroenterology | 1992

Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy of pancreatic calculi

Myriam Delhaye; Alain Vandermeeren; Michel Baize; Michel Cremer

Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL) has been used to disintegrate pancreatic stones located in the main pancreatic duct for 123 patients with severe chronic pancreatitis. Endoscopic management following ESWL is aimed at restoring the pancreatic flow to the duodenum. Stone disintegration was achieved in 122 patients, whereas a decrease in the main pancreatic duct diameter resulted in 111, and complete clearance of the main pancreatic duct was obtained in 72. Pain relief, complete (40/88) or partial (35/88), correlated significantly with the results of the endoscopic drainage of the main pancreatic duct (e.g., decrease in main pancreatic duct diameter). Relapsing pain was most often related to recurrent pancreatic duct obstruction. Of 76 patients whose body weight had decreased before ESWL, 54 gained weight. Improvement of the exocrine function, evaluated by the [14C]triolein breath test before and 11 months, on the average, after ESWL, was observed in 12 patients among 22 for whom this test was performed before and after treatment. Improvement of the endocrine function after relief of obstruction of the main pancreatic duct was less frequently recorded (4/41). ESWL of pancreatic stones is a new, safe, and highly effective method of facilitating the endoscopic procedures for relief of pancreatic duct obstruction in severe chronic pancreatitis.


Gut | 1996

Intraductal papillary mucinous tumours of the pancreas. Clinical and therapeutic issues in 32 patients.

Camille Azar; J. Van De Stadt; F. Rickaert; M Devière; Michel Baize; G Klöppel; Michel Gelin; Michel Cremer

BACKGROUND/AIM: The clinical presentation, pancreatographic findings, and outcome of patients with intraductal papillary mucinous tumours have not been reported in a large patient series in the English literature. This study reviewed 32 patients diagnosed between 1980 and 1994, with special attention to these features. PATIENTS/METHOD: Data on 24 operated and eight non-operated patients were abstracted from inpatient, outpatient, and procedure records. RESULTS: Acute pancreatitis was the most common presentation seen in 56% of patients. Relapses occurred during an average of 43 months before diagnosis. A patulous papilla was observed in 55% of the cases. Endoscopic pancreatography showed communicating cysts, a diffusely dilated main pancreatic duct, and amorphous defects in 42, 71, and 97% respectively. An invasive carcinoma was found in nine of 24 (37.5%) of operated patients: six of the patients (66%) died or developed metastases within three years after surgery. No mortality was related to the tumour in absence of invasive carcinoma. Benign recurrence on the remaining pancreas was unusual and occurred late after surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Intraductal papillary mucinous tumours must be considered in the differential diagnosis of relapsing pancreatitis. Despite slow growing, these tumours have an obvious malignant potential and a very poor prognosis when invasive carcinoma has developed. Early recognition and resection are the cornerstones of treatment.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 1996

Endoscopic pancreatic drainage in chronic pancreatitis associated with ductal stones: long-term results

Jean-Marc Dumonceau; Jacques Devière; Olivier Le Moine; Myriam Delhaye; Alain Vandermeeren; Michel Baize; Daniel Van Gansbeke; Michel Cremer

BACKGROUND In severe chronic pancreatitis associated with intraductal stones, therapeutic endoscopy aims to reduce increased intraductal pressure by pancreatic sphincterotomy and stone clearance. METHODS Results of treatment were evaluated in 70 new patients who underwent pancreatic sphincterotomy and attempted stone removal. Technical results and frequency of pain relief and recurrence are compared. RESULTS Complete ductal clearance of calculi was obtained in 50% of cases. Immediate clinical improvement occurred in 95% of patients with painful attacks. No severe complications or mortality occurred. Fifty-four percent of all patients with painful chronic pancreatitis did not experience any pain recurrence within 2 years. Associations found to be statistically significant by multivariate analysis were ductal clearance and extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy, pain disappearance and ductal clearance, pain recurrence and long evolution, and severe disease before treatment and presence of a ductal substenosis. CONCLUSIONS In this subset of patients our results indicate that the pain of chronic pancreatitis is mainly related to increased intraductal pressure. Endoscopic management appears to be a safe, conservative, alternative to surgery. The best results are obtained when it is performed early in the course of calcifying chronic pancreatitis.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 1990

Endoscopic biliary drainage in chronic pancreatitis

Jacques Devière; S. Devaere; Michel Baize; Michel Cremer

Between April 1982 and March 1988, 25 patients with chronic pancreatitis presented with biliary stenosis and significant cholestasis. They were treated by endoprosthesis placement. Nineteen patients had jaundice, and, initially, seven had cholangitis (including three with hepatic abscesses). ERCP was successful in all 25 patients. Cholangitis, cholestasis, and jaundice resolved in all cases after stent placement. Two patients died in the 2 months after treatment. Complete follow-up (mean duration, 14 months, range 7 to 42 months) was available for 19 of the 23 remaining patients. Migration of the stent occurred in 10 patients and stent blockage in 8 patients, with relapsing cholestasis (N = 12), cholangitis (N = 4), or without symptoms (N = 2). Only three of these patients are now asymptomatic without a stent in place after 12 to 72 months. In all of the other cases, stents have been replaced or patients have been treated by surgery. We conclude that endoscopic biliary drainage is an effective treatment for resolving cholangitis or jaundice in patients with chronic pancreatitis and biliary stenosis, but that the results of definitive endoscopic drainage for these patients are less satisfactory because resolution of the stricture after removal of the stent is rarely obtained.


Gut | 1994

Management of common bile duct stricture caused by chronic pancreatitis with metal mesh self expandable stents.

Jacques Devière; Michel Cremer; Michel Baize; Jonathan Love; B. Sugai; Alain Vandermeeren

Twenty patients with chronic pancreatitis and signs of biliary obstruction were treated by endoscopic placement of self expandable metal mesh stents, and followed up prospectively. Eleven had been treated previously with plastic endoprostheses. All had persistent cholestasis, seven patients had jaundice, and three overt cholangitis. Endoscopic stent placement was successful in all cases. No early clinical complication was seen and cholestasis, jaundice or cholangitis rapidly resolved in all patients. Mean follow up was 33 months (range 24 to 42) and consisted of clinical evaluation, ultrasonography, and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). In 18 patients, successive ERCPs and cholangioscopies have shown that the metal mesh initially embeds in the bile duct wall and is rapidly covered by a continuous tissue by three months. The stent lumen remained patent and functional throughout the follow up period except in two patients who developed epithelial hyperplasia within the stent resulting in recurrent biliary obstruction, three and six months after placement. They were treated endoscopically with standard plastic stents with one of these patients ultimately requiring surgical drainage. No patient free of clinical or radiological signs of epithelial hyperplasia after six months developed obstruction later. This new treatment could become an effective alternative to surgical biliary diversion if further controlled follow up studies confirm the initial impression that self expandable metal mesh stents offer a low morbidity alternative for longterm biliary drainage in chronic pancreatitis without the inconvenience associated with plastic stents.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 1998

Plastic and metal stents for postoperative benign bile duct strictures: the best and the worst

Jean-Marc Dumonceau; Jacques Devière; Myriam Delhaye; Michel Baize; Michel Cremer

BACKGROUND Endoscopic treatment of postoperative benign bile duct strictures (BBDS) is technically challenging, and the long-term outcome after stricture dilation remains poorly defined. METHODS Forty-eight cases of postoperative BBDS with attempted endoscopic treatment (either transient plastic stenting or definitive metal stent insertion) were reviewed. RESULTS Endoscopic stricture dilation succeeded in 47 of 48 cases (98%). No procedure-related mortality was observed; 16 (33%) procedure-related or stent-associated complications were observed during treatment. Endoscopic treatment was interrupted in five patients. Stricture relapse occurred in 6 of 6 (100%) and 7 of 36 (19%) patients after metal stent insertion and plastic stent removal, respectively (p < 0.001) (mean follow-up periods 50+/-12 and 44+/-34 months, respectively). After plastic stent removal, stricture relapses were more frequent among patients with strictures related to liver transplantation as opposed to other surgical procedures (p < 0.05); these recurrent strictures were successfully treated by repeated insertion of plastic stents on a temporary basis. At the end of follow-up, all but one patient treated with plastic stents had normal serum alkaline phosphatase values. CONCLUSION Metal stents proved to be inadequate for treating postoperative BBDS. Temporary insertion of a plastic stent (possibly repeated) provided long-term results equal or superior to those reported for surgical biliary drainage. Repeated insertion of plastic stents was more frequently indicated for strictures related to liver transplantation compared with other surgical procedures.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 1995

Complete disruption of the main pancreatic duct: endoscopic management.

Jacques Devière; Hernan Bueso; Michel Baize; Camille Azar; Jonathan Love; Estela Moreno; Michel Cremer

BACKGROUND Complete disruption of the main pancreatic duct is an unusual event in the course of acute or chronic pancreatitis. Endoscopic management has already proven effective in the treatment of partial ruptures. METHODS Thirteen patients presented over a 7-year period with acute (9 patients) or chronic (4 patients) pancreatitis complicated by complete disruption of the main pancreatic duct and cyst formation. Endoscopic treatment was attempted in 12. Treatment varied depending on the site of the rupture and accessibility of the pseudocyst and consisted either of transpapillary drainage (3), cystogastrostomy (3), cystoduodenostomy (2), or combined procedures (4) when one of these procedures did not induce significant decrease in collection size. Long-term results were obtained by observing the patients with ultrasound, CT, ERCP, and clinical evaluation. RESULTS Short-term results were excellent with complete cyst resolution and clinical recovery in all but one patient treated by endoscopy. Two patients had pseudocyst infection successfully treated by drainage and antibiotics. Long-term follow-up was available for 11 patients (mean duration, 30.2 months; range, 12 to 72 months) without relapsing clinical symptoms or pseudocyst. CONCLUSIONS Endoscopic management is effective and safe for treating patients with complete main pancreatic duct disruption. A double drainage combining transpapillary drainage and cystoenterostomy must be done in selected instances, especially when rupture occurs in the setting of chronic pancreatitis with stricture or stone distal to the rupture.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2002

Endoscopic cystenterostomy of nonbulging pancreatic fluid collections

Eduardo Sanchez Cortes; Alain Maalak; Olivier Le Moine; Michel Baize; Myriam Delhaye; Celso Matos; Jacques Devière

BACKGROUND A prerequisite for endoscopic drainage of pancreatic fluid collections without EUS is the presence of a visible bulge in the GI wall. Our experience with endoscopic cystostomy of nonbulging pancreatic fluid collections is described. METHODS Thirty-three patients underwent 34 endoscopic attempts at transmural drainage of nonbulging pancreatic fluid collections over a 2-year period. The etiology of the nonbulging pancreatic fluid collections was chronic pancreatitis in 26 cases and acute pancreatitis in 7. Indications for drainage included one or more of the following: abdominal pain, infection, biliary obstruction, and external fistula. The diameter of the collections ranged from 20 to 160 mm (median 52 mm). RESULTS Thirty-two of 34 drainage attempts were successful (94%). Eighteen cystostomies were performed under fluoroscopy alone and 14 by EUS together with fluoroscopy. Procedure-related complications occurred with 3 of 34 attempts (8%). Surgery was not required for treatment of the complications and there were no deaths from the procedure. Follow-up was available for 31 patients (median 21 months, range 9 to 40 months). One nonbulging pancreatic fluid collections recurred 7 months after drainage. CONCLUSIONS Endoscopic cystenterostomy of nonbulging pancreatic collections is feasible, and the results of the procedure are similar to those of cystenterostomy for bulging collections.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 1987

Palliative endoscopic management of obstructive esophagogastric cancer: laser or prosthesis?

Michel Buset; B. Des Marez; Michel Baize; N. Bourgeois; C. de Boelpaepe; J. de Toeuf; Michel Cremer

One hundred forty-four patients with unresectable malignant strictures of the upper digestive tract were managed by palliative endoscopic methods: 116 by intubation and 28 by YAG laser phototherapy. The success rate was 95% for intubation and 100% for laser. The morbidity rate was 13.8% for intubation (perforation 7.8%, bleeding 3.4%, and aspiration pneumonia 2.2%) and 3.6% (one perforation) for laser. The mortality rate was 4.3% for intubation and 0% for laser. Specific indications for intubation were esobronchial fistulas, extensive strictures, and very long stenotic lesions. Very high cervical strictures and nonocclusive asymmetrical tumors were better treated with laser. In select cases, combined therapy can be useful. We conclude that both methods are highly efficient in restoring patency and relieving dysphagia. Further large scale randomized trials are necessary to compare functional results and survival rate.

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Jacques Devière

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Michel Cremer

Free University of Brussels

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Myriam Delhaye

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Alain Vandermeeren

Free University of Brussels

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Michel Buset

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Celso Matos

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Olivier Le Moine

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Camille Azar

Université libre de Bruxelles

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J. de Toeuf

Free University of Brussels

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