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Contact Dissolution Therapy for Gallstones: What You Need to Know

Contact Dissolution Therapy for Gallstones: What You Need to Know

📅 Medically reviewed: April 12, 2026 | ⏱️ 7 min read | 🏥 Vivekananda Hospital, Hyderabad

What is contact dissolution therapy?

Contact dissolution therapy is a non‑surgical, experimental procedure that involves injecting a solvent directly into the gallbladder to dissolve cholesterol gallstones. The most commonly used solvent is methyl tert‑butyl ether (MTBE), a potent organic solvent that rapidly dissolves cholesterol stones. The solvent is delivered through a percutaneous (through the skin) catheter placed into the gallbladder under radiological guidance. The procedure was developed in the 1980s and 1990s as an alternative to cholecystectomy for patients unfit for surgery.

📌 Key fact: Contact dissolution therapy is rarely performed today due to the availability of safer, more effective treatments (laparoscopic cholecystectomy, ERCP, oral UDCA). It remains a historical footnote or a last‑resort option in very select centres.

How MTBE dissolves gallstones

Methyl tert‑butyl ether (MTBE) is a colourless, volatile liquid that is an excellent solvent for cholesterol. When infused directly into the gallbladder, it rapidly dissolves cholesterol stones by breaking down the cholesterol matrix. Unlike oral UDCA (which takes months), MTBE acts within hours. The procedure requires multiple cycles of infusion and aspiration of the solvent to dissolve the stone and remove the dissolved cholesterol.

MTBE does not dissolve pigment stones or calcified stones. It is effective only for pure cholesterol stones.

Who is a candidate? (Very few)

Eligibility criteria are extremely narrow:

  • Pure, radiolucent cholesterol stones (confirmed by CT or oral cholecystography).
  • Solitary or a few small stones (<20mm total stone burden).
  • Functioning gallbladder (able to empty dissolved material).
  • Patient at very high risk for surgery (e.g., severe cardiac or pulmonary disease) and not a candidate for laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
  • Patient refuses surgery but still wants stone removal.

Less than 5% of gallstone patients meet these criteria.

The procedure: percutaneous catheter + MTBE infusion

  1. Percutaneous catheter placement: Under local anaesthesia and ultrasound/CT guidance, a thin needle is inserted through the skin and liver into the gallbladder. A catheter is left in place.
  2. Gallbladder aspiration: Bile is aspirated to create space for the solvent.
  3. MTBE infusion: MTBE is infused into the gallbladder, left in contact with the stone for 5‑15 minutes, then aspirated. This cycle is repeated multiple times over several hours.
  4. Monitoring: The patient is closely monitored for leakage, pain, or systemic toxicity.
  5. Completion: Once the stone is dissolved (confirmed by repeat imaging or disappearance of stone fragments), the catheter is removed.

The entire procedure typically takes 4‑8 hours and is performed under sedation. Most patients require hospitalisation for 1‑3 days.

Success rates and stone‑free outcomes

In early clinical trials (1980s‑1990s), MTBE contact dissolution achieved:

  • Complete stone dissolution in 70‑90% of patients with solitary, small (<20mm) cholesterol stones.
  • Partial dissolution in another 10‑20%.
  • Success rates were lower for multiple stones, stones >20mm, or non‑cholesterol stones.

However, recurrence rates after successful dissolution were 30‑50% within 3‑5 years (similar to UDCA), because the gallbladder remains and the lithogenic bile persists.

Risks and complications

Contact dissolution carries significant risks, which contributed to its abandonment:

  • Catheter dislodgement or bile leak (5‑10%): Can cause peritonitis requiring surgery.
  • MTBE leakage into the peritoneal cavity: Causes severe chemical peritonitis, pain, and nausea.
  • Systemic absorption of MTBE: Can cause sedation, dizziness, nausea, and rarely respiratory depression.
  • Acute pancreatitis (1‑2%): If MTBE refluxes into the common bile duct.
  • Cholangitis or cholecystitis.
  • Incomplete dissolution requiring repeat procedure.
⚠️ Important: Because of these risks and the availability of safer, definitive treatments (laparoscopic cholecystectomy), contact dissolution is no longer offered at most hospitals, including Vivekananda Hospital.

Why contact dissolution is rarely used today

Several factors have rendered contact dissolution obsolete:

  • Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is safer, faster, and definitive. It removes the gallbladder, eliminating recurrence.
  • Oral UDCA is non‑invasive for the few patients who are candidates for dissolution (small cholesterol stones).
  • ERCP removes common bile duct stones, and cholecystectomy addresses the source.
  • The risks of MTBE (leakage, pancreatitis, systemic toxicity) are unacceptable in the modern era.
  • Recurrence rates are high – patients often need surgery anyway.
Conclusion: Contact dissolution therapy is an interesting historical procedure but has no practical role in modern gallstone management. If you are told you need it, seek a second opinion.

Interactive FAQ – Contact dissolution therapy

Is contact dissolution therapy still available in India?

Very rarely. A few research centres may offer it under experimental protocols, but it is not standard care. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the gold standard.

Does contact dissolution work for pigment stones?

No – MTBE only dissolves cholesterol stones. Pigment stones are completely resistant.

How long does the MTBE procedure take?

4‑8 hours of repeated infusion and aspiration cycles, usually performed in a single session. Hospital stay of 1‑3 days.

Can MTBE be used for common bile duct stones?

No – the solvent cannot be safely infused into the bile duct because of the risk of pancreatitis and cholangitis. ERCP is the standard for CBD stones.

What is the difference between contact dissolution and oral dissolution?

Oral dissolution (UDCA) works slowly over months, is non‑invasive, and has low toxicity. Contact dissolution is invasive, works in hours, but has significant risks and is rarely used.

Is contact dissolution covered by insurance?

Most insurers in India do not cover experimental procedures. Standard treatments (cholecystectomy, ERCP, UDCA) are covered.

What happens if MTBE leaks during the procedure?

MTBE leakage into the abdomen causes severe chemical peritonitis, requiring emergency surgery to irrigate the abdomen. This is a serious complication.

Will my gallstones come back after contact dissolution?

Yes – recurrence rate is 30‑50% within 5 years because the gallbladder is still present. Most patients eventually need cholecystectomy.

🩺
Dr. Surya Prakash B
MS, MCh (Urology) | Consultant Urologist
Vivekananda Hospital, Begumpet, Hyderabad
Medical reviewer for 247healthcare.blog | Review date: April 12, 2026

Disclaimer: Contact dissolution therapy is not a standard treatment. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the gold standard. Consult a gastroenterologist or surgeon at Vivekananda Hospital for appropriate management.

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