In the current issue of Endoscopy, Pécsi and his colleagues from Pécs, Szeged, and Budapest report an elegant meta-analysis comparing the success and complication rates of transpancreatic sphincterotomy (TPS) and needle-knife precut papillotomy (NKPP) in patients with difficult biliary access [1]. Never mind that difficult access was variably defined, or that, like all such studies, there is an admixture of prospective and retrospective series, and that many of them were undertaken prior to the use of guidewire or double-guidewire cannulation and attempts to minimize the risk of post-endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) pancreatitis with pancreatic stenting or periprocedural nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Never mind also that the meta-analysis failed to include the prospective study by Kahaleh et al. [2] and Baron's accompanying editorial [3], which would have added 116 patients and an additional prospective series to the 959 patients included in the 5 prospective and 8 retrospective studies in this analysis.