Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy (PEG) Tube
I. Background
Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) is a commonly performed procedure that provides durable enteral access for feeding and medications. This document outlines patient selection and perioperative considerations for PEG tube placement.
II. Guideline
A. Patient Selection / Preoperative Care
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Contraindications to PEG Placement
- Anatomic inability to place PEG (e.g., Roux-en-Y anatomy, mesh overlying site, esophageal stricture)
- Uncontrolled agitation (requiring restraints/sitter in prior 48 hrs)
- Ascites
- Severe dementia
- Anorexia nervosa
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Special Situations
- Esophageal cancer: Discuss with Thoracic Surgery if esophagectomy planned
- Failure to thrive: Proceed only if medically reversible
- Palliative decompression: OK in unresectable malignancy
- Peritoneal dialysis: Must be on HD x6 weeks before PEG; wait ≥4 weeks to resume PD
- VP shunt: Separate PEG and VP shunt placement by ≥7 days
- ALS (without trach): Prefer IR-placed gastrostomy due to anesthesia risk
- Active chemotherapy:
- Delay PEG during severe leukopenia (WBC <2.5 or ANC <0.5) or platelets <50k
- Risk/benefit discussion required
- Immunosuppressants / Corticosteroids:
- Delay PEG during induction therapy
- If planning to stop, wait until discontinued
- If long-term use, wait until on stable maintenance dose
-
Anticoagulation Management
- Heparin drip: Hold 4 hours pre- and post-procedure
- Prophylactic heparin/enoxaparin: Do not hold
- Therapeutic enoxaparin: Hold AM dose; resume PM if no bleeding
- DOACs: Hold 24 hrs prior; resume PM if no bleeding
- Aspirin: Continue
- Clopidogrel/Ticagrelor/Effient (alone): Continue
- Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT):
- Preferred: Continue aspirin, hold second agent 5 days before procedure
- If unable: Risk/benefit discussion on delaying PEG vs. performing while on DAPT
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Preoperative Tube Feeds & Diet
- Bedside PEG (ICU)
- Protected airway: Hold feeds for ≥1 hour
- Unprotected airway: Hold solids/tube feeds ≥6 hrs, clear liquids ≥2 hrs
- OR PEG
- NPO after midnight
- High-risk nutrition: solids/tube feeds ≥6 hrs, clear liquids ≥2 hrs
- Bedside PEG (ICU)
B. Procedural Care
- Follow bedside surgery protocol: sterile prep, timeout, sedation, consent
- Antibiotic prophylaxis: Weight-based Cefazolin within 1 hr of incision
- T-fastener Indications:
- Corticosteroids
- Chemotherapy
- Immunosuppressants
- At attending discretion
- Equipment: See Appendix A
C. Postoperative Care
-
Immediate PEG Care
- PEG to gravity drainage (foley bag) x 4 hrs
- Start tube feeds and meds ≥4 hrs post-procedure
- Document PEG depth post-op and POD1
- Continue postop checks for high-risk or complicated patients
- Remove T-fasteners at 2–3 weeks unless causing necrosis
- Schedule follow-up at 4 weeks
- If PEG becomes dislodged → Urgent EGS evaluation
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Dislodged PEG Tube
- If <30 days from placement → emergent EGS consult
- Concerning findings: peritonitis, free air/fluid, infection → consider exploration
- If stable, attempt balloon gastrostomy tube placement with imaging confirmation (X-ray or CT with IV + per-tube contrast)
- Consider repeat PEG in stable patients
-
PEG Removal
- Minimum of 4 weeks post-placement
- Criteria to remove:
- Resolved indication (e.g., cleared by SLP)
- 2 weeks of full PO intake
- Weight stability
- Tolerance of food textures
- No planned surgery or radiation
- Consider high-dose PPI to support tract closure
III. References
- Abraham NS, et al. J Can Assoc Gastroenterol. 2022;5(2):100–101.
- Bischoff SC, et al. Clin Nutr. 2022;41(2):468–488.
- Boullata JI, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2017;41(1):15–103.
- ASGE Standards of Practice Committee, et al. Gastrointest Endosc. 2016;83(1):3–16.
- ASGE Standards of Practice Committee, et al. Gastrointest Endosc. 2015;81(1):81–89.
- Davies N, et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021;8(8):CD013503.
- de Sousa Magalhaes R, et al. Scand J Gastroenterol. 2020;55(4):485–491.
- Gangwani MK, et al. Dig Dis Sci. 2023;68(5):1966–1974.
- Keung EZ, et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2012;215(6):777–786.
- Lipp A, Lusardi G. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013;2013(11):CD005571.
- Lucendo AJ, et al. Rev Esp Enferm Dig. 2015;107(3):128–136.
- Meenaghan N, et al. J Gastrointest Surg. 2009;13(2):236–238.
- Oterdoom LH, et al. J Neurosurg. 2017;127(4):899–904.
- Rosenberger LH, et al. Surg Endosc. 2011;25(10):3307–3311.
IV. Authors
- Elizabeth D. Krebs, MD
- Nina E. Collins, APRN
- Christian J. Carpenter, RN
- Michael C. Smith, MD
Appendix A: Procedural Equipment
- Trauma procedure cart
- Sterile towels
- Bite block
- Sterile gown and gloves
- Eye protection
- Endoscopy scope
- Pediatric colonoscope for PEG-J
- Pediatric XP scope for esophageal narrowing
- 1-liter bottle normal saline
- Endoscopy connector set
- Suction tubing and canister
- Chlorhexidine skin prep
- PEG or PEG-J kit
- If PEG-J: T-fasteners are required
Appendix B: Bedside Gastrostomy Care
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Tube site monitoring
- Record external length every shift
- Clean site each shift with NS-moistened gauze
- If skin breakdown: Triple Care EPC + dry gauze
- If intact skin: Triple Care Ointment or Ilex Cream + dry gauze
- Change gauze PRN
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Tube care
- Flush with 30 mL water every 8 hrs and PRN
- Secure tube to prevent pulling or dislodgement
- Use abdominal binder or appropriate tape
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Feeding Instructions
- Follow attending or nutrition orders
- If tube is dislodged or depth changes → stop feeds and notify EGS