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AGA Clinical Practice Update: Expert review on deprescribing PPIs
An American Gastroenterological Association practice update on deprescribing proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) delineates conditions under which drug withdrawal should be considered, and acknowledges that conversations between physicians and patients can be complicated. An inappropriate decision to discontinue PPI therapy can have significant consequences for the patient, while continued inappropriate use raises health care costs and may rarely lead to adverse effects.
One purpose of the update is to provide guidance when patients and providers don’t have the resources to systematically examine the issue, especially when other medical concerns may be in play. The authors also suggested that physicians include pharmacists in the employment of the best practices advice.
“None of these statements represents a radical departure from previously published guidance on PPI appropriateness and deprescribing: Our [recommendations] simply seek to summarize the evidence and to provide the clinician with a single document which distills the evidence down into clinically applicable guidance statements,” Laura Targownik, MD, associate professor of medicine at the University of Toronto and corresponding author of the practice update published in Gastroenterology said in an interview.
“PPIs are highly effective medications for specific gastrointestinal conditions, and are largely safe. However, PPIs are often used in situations where they have minimal and no proven benefit, leading to unnecessary health care spending and unnecessary exposure to drugs. Our paper helps clinicians identify which patients require long-term PPI use as well as those who may be using them unnecessarily, and provides actionable advice on how to deprescribe PPIs from those deemed to be using them without clear benefit,” said Dr. Targownik.
An estimated 7%-15% of health care patients in general and 40% of those over 70 use PPIs at any given time, making them among the most commonly used drugs. About one in four patients who start PPIs will use them for a year or more. Aside from their use for acid-mediated upper gastrointestinal conditions, PPIs often find use for less well-defined complaints. Since PPIs are available over the counter, physicians may not even be involved in a patient’s decision to use them.
Although PPI use has been associated with adverse events, including chronic kidney disease, fractures, dementia, and greater risk of COVID-19 infection, there is not high-quality evidence to suggest that PPIs are directly responsible for any of these adverse events.
The authors suggested the primary care provider should periodically review and document the complaints or indications that prompt PPI use. When a patient is found to have no chronic condition that PPIs could reasonably address, the physician should consider a trial withdrawal. Patients who take PPIs twice daily for a known chronic condition should be considered for a reduction to a once-daily dose.
In general, PPI discontinuation is not a good option for most patients with complicated gastroesophageal reflux disease, such as those with a history of severe erosive esophagitis, esophageal ulcer, or peptic stricture. The same is true for patients with Barrett’s esophagus, eosinophilic esophagitis, or idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
Before any deprescribing is considered, the patient should be evaluated for risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and those at high risk are not candidates for PPI deprescribing.
When the decision is made to withdraw PPIs, the patient should be advised of an increased risk of transient upper gastrointestinal symptoms caused by rebound acid hypersecretion.
The withdrawal of PPIs can be done abruptly, or the dose can be tapered gradually.
PPI-associated adverse events should not be a consideration when discussing the option of withdrawing from PPIs. Instead, the decision should be based on the absence of a specific reason for their use. A history of such adverse events, or a current adverse event, should not be a sole reason for discontinuation, nor should risk factors associated with risk of adverse events. Concerns about adverse events have driven recent interest in reducing use of PPIs, but those adverse events were identified through retrospective studies and may be only associated with PPI use rather than caused by it. In many cases there is no plausible mechanistic cause, and no clinical trials have demonstrated increased adverse events in PPI users.
Three-quarters of physicians say they have altered treatment plans for patients because of concerns about PPI adverse events, and 80% say they would advise patients to withdraw PPIs if they learned the patient was at increased risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Unnecessary withdrawal can lead to recurrent symptoms and complications when PPIs are effective treatments. “Therefore, physicians should not use concern about unproven complications of PPI use as a justification for PPI deprescribing if there remain ongoing valid indications for PPI use,” the authors wrote.
Dr. Targownik has received investigator-initiated funding from Janssen Canada and served on advisory boards for AbbVie Canada, Takeda Canada, Merck Canada, Pfizer Canada, Janssen Canada, Roche Canada, and Sandoz Canada. She is the lead on an IBD registry supported by AbbVie Canada, Takeda Canada, Merck Canada, Pfizer Canada, Amgen Canada, Roche Canada, and Sandoz Canada. None of the companies with whom Dr. Targownik has a relation are involved in the manufacturing, distribution, or sales of PPIs or any other agents mentioned in the manuscript.
An American Gastroenterological Association practice update on deprescribing proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) delineates conditions under which drug withdrawal should be considered, and acknowledges that conversations between physicians and patients can be complicated. An inappropriate decision to discontinue PPI therapy can have significant consequences for the patient, while continued inappropriate use raises health care costs and may rarely lead to adverse effects.
One purpose of the update is to provide guidance when patients and providers don’t have the resources to systematically examine the issue, especially when other medical concerns may be in play. The authors also suggested that physicians include pharmacists in the employment of the best practices advice.
“None of these statements represents a radical departure from previously published guidance on PPI appropriateness and deprescribing: Our [recommendations] simply seek to summarize the evidence and to provide the clinician with a single document which distills the evidence down into clinically applicable guidance statements,” Laura Targownik, MD, associate professor of medicine at the University of Toronto and corresponding author of the practice update published in Gastroenterology said in an interview.
“PPIs are highly effective medications for specific gastrointestinal conditions, and are largely safe. However, PPIs are often used in situations where they have minimal and no proven benefit, leading to unnecessary health care spending and unnecessary exposure to drugs. Our paper helps clinicians identify which patients require long-term PPI use as well as those who may be using them unnecessarily, and provides actionable advice on how to deprescribe PPIs from those deemed to be using them without clear benefit,” said Dr. Targownik.
An estimated 7%-15% of health care patients in general and 40% of those over 70 use PPIs at any given time, making them among the most commonly used drugs. About one in four patients who start PPIs will use them for a year or more. Aside from their use for acid-mediated upper gastrointestinal conditions, PPIs often find use for less well-defined complaints. Since PPIs are available over the counter, physicians may not even be involved in a patient’s decision to use them.
Although PPI use has been associated with adverse events, including chronic kidney disease, fractures, dementia, and greater risk of COVID-19 infection, there is not high-quality evidence to suggest that PPIs are directly responsible for any of these adverse events.
The authors suggested the primary care provider should periodically review and document the complaints or indications that prompt PPI use. When a patient is found to have no chronic condition that PPIs could reasonably address, the physician should consider a trial withdrawal. Patients who take PPIs twice daily for a known chronic condition should be considered for a reduction to a once-daily dose.
In general, PPI discontinuation is not a good option for most patients with complicated gastroesophageal reflux disease, such as those with a history of severe erosive esophagitis, esophageal ulcer, or peptic stricture. The same is true for patients with Barrett’s esophagus, eosinophilic esophagitis, or idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
Before any deprescribing is considered, the patient should be evaluated for risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and those at high risk are not candidates for PPI deprescribing.
When the decision is made to withdraw PPIs, the patient should be advised of an increased risk of transient upper gastrointestinal symptoms caused by rebound acid hypersecretion.
The withdrawal of PPIs can be done abruptly, or the dose can be tapered gradually.
PPI-associated adverse events should not be a consideration when discussing the option of withdrawing from PPIs. Instead, the decision should be based on the absence of a specific reason for their use. A history of such adverse events, or a current adverse event, should not be a sole reason for discontinuation, nor should risk factors associated with risk of adverse events. Concerns about adverse events have driven recent interest in reducing use of PPIs, but those adverse events were identified through retrospective studies and may be only associated with PPI use rather than caused by it. In many cases there is no plausible mechanistic cause, and no clinical trials have demonstrated increased adverse events in PPI users.
Three-quarters of physicians say they have altered treatment plans for patients because of concerns about PPI adverse events, and 80% say they would advise patients to withdraw PPIs if they learned the patient was at increased risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Unnecessary withdrawal can lead to recurrent symptoms and complications when PPIs are effective treatments. “Therefore, physicians should not use concern about unproven complications of PPI use as a justification for PPI deprescribing if there remain ongoing valid indications for PPI use,” the authors wrote.
Dr. Targownik has received investigator-initiated funding from Janssen Canada and served on advisory boards for AbbVie Canada, Takeda Canada, Merck Canada, Pfizer Canada, Janssen Canada, Roche Canada, and Sandoz Canada. She is the lead on an IBD registry supported by AbbVie Canada, Takeda Canada, Merck Canada, Pfizer Canada, Amgen Canada, Roche Canada, and Sandoz Canada. None of the companies with whom Dr. Targownik has a relation are involved in the manufacturing, distribution, or sales of PPIs or any other agents mentioned in the manuscript.
An American Gastroenterological Association practice update on deprescribing proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) delineates conditions under which drug withdrawal should be considered, and acknowledges that conversations between physicians and patients can be complicated. An inappropriate decision to discontinue PPI therapy can have significant consequences for the patient, while continued inappropriate use raises health care costs and may rarely lead to adverse effects.
One purpose of the update is to provide guidance when patients and providers don’t have the resources to systematically examine the issue, especially when other medical concerns may be in play. The authors also suggested that physicians include pharmacists in the employment of the best practices advice.
“None of these statements represents a radical departure from previously published guidance on PPI appropriateness and deprescribing: Our [recommendations] simply seek to summarize the evidence and to provide the clinician with a single document which distills the evidence down into clinically applicable guidance statements,” Laura Targownik, MD, associate professor of medicine at the University of Toronto and corresponding author of the practice update published in Gastroenterology said in an interview.
“PPIs are highly effective medications for specific gastrointestinal conditions, and are largely safe. However, PPIs are often used in situations where they have minimal and no proven benefit, leading to unnecessary health care spending and unnecessary exposure to drugs. Our paper helps clinicians identify which patients require long-term PPI use as well as those who may be using them unnecessarily, and provides actionable advice on how to deprescribe PPIs from those deemed to be using them without clear benefit,” said Dr. Targownik.
An estimated 7%-15% of health care patients in general and 40% of those over 70 use PPIs at any given time, making them among the most commonly used drugs. About one in four patients who start PPIs will use them for a year or more. Aside from their use for acid-mediated upper gastrointestinal conditions, PPIs often find use for less well-defined complaints. Since PPIs are available over the counter, physicians may not even be involved in a patient’s decision to use them.
Although PPI use has been associated with adverse events, including chronic kidney disease, fractures, dementia, and greater risk of COVID-19 infection, there is not high-quality evidence to suggest that PPIs are directly responsible for any of these adverse events.
The authors suggested the primary care provider should periodically review and document the complaints or indications that prompt PPI use. When a patient is found to have no chronic condition that PPIs could reasonably address, the physician should consider a trial withdrawal. Patients who take PPIs twice daily for a known chronic condition should be considered for a reduction to a once-daily dose.
In general, PPI discontinuation is not a good option for most patients with complicated gastroesophageal reflux disease, such as those with a history of severe erosive esophagitis, esophageal ulcer, or peptic stricture. The same is true for patients with Barrett’s esophagus, eosinophilic esophagitis, or idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
Before any deprescribing is considered, the patient should be evaluated for risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and those at high risk are not candidates for PPI deprescribing.
When the decision is made to withdraw PPIs, the patient should be advised of an increased risk of transient upper gastrointestinal symptoms caused by rebound acid hypersecretion.
The withdrawal of PPIs can be done abruptly, or the dose can be tapered gradually.
PPI-associated adverse events should not be a consideration when discussing the option of withdrawing from PPIs. Instead, the decision should be based on the absence of a specific reason for their use. A history of such adverse events, or a current adverse event, should not be a sole reason for discontinuation, nor should risk factors associated with risk of adverse events. Concerns about adverse events have driven recent interest in reducing use of PPIs, but those adverse events were identified through retrospective studies and may be only associated with PPI use rather than caused by it. In many cases there is no plausible mechanistic cause, and no clinical trials have demonstrated increased adverse events in PPI users.
Three-quarters of physicians say they have altered treatment plans for patients because of concerns about PPI adverse events, and 80% say they would advise patients to withdraw PPIs if they learned the patient was at increased risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Unnecessary withdrawal can lead to recurrent symptoms and complications when PPIs are effective treatments. “Therefore, physicians should not use concern about unproven complications of PPI use as a justification for PPI deprescribing if there remain ongoing valid indications for PPI use,” the authors wrote.
Dr. Targownik has received investigator-initiated funding from Janssen Canada and served on advisory boards for AbbVie Canada, Takeda Canada, Merck Canada, Pfizer Canada, Janssen Canada, Roche Canada, and Sandoz Canada. She is the lead on an IBD registry supported by AbbVie Canada, Takeda Canada, Merck Canada, Pfizer Canada, Amgen Canada, Roche Canada, and Sandoz Canada. None of the companies with whom Dr. Targownik has a relation are involved in the manufacturing, distribution, or sales of PPIs or any other agents mentioned in the manuscript.
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY
Topical steroid shows promise for EOE
A topical formulation of fluticasone designed to dissolve and coat the esophagus appears safe and effective for the treatment of eosinophilic esophagitis (EOE), according to new results from a phase 2b study. The results pave the way for phase 3 clinical trials.
Topical steroids are frequently used off-label for EOE. They may be repurposed from nebulizers used for asthma, with patients mixing the drugs themselves or sending them to a pharmacy to be compounded. Patients remove the spacer from a nebulizer in order to swallow the active compound or mix the liquid that would be nebulized with honey or Splenda to thicken it to maximize its contact with the esophagus. “Both of these things are very cumbersome and difficult. I get a lot of complaints from patients [that] it doesn’t taste good. So, the fact that we have a drug that we are already using, but it’s designed for the esophagus, is really exciting,” said Nielsen Fernandez-Becker, MD, PhD, of the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at Stanford (Calif.) University. Dr. Fernandez-Becker referred some patients to the trial and performed some procedures.
“I don’t think the findings are unexpected, given what we’ve seen with swallowed inhalers with fluticasone, but I think the real importance of this is that it does look like a dedicated swallow form works. And if this leads to [Food and Drug Administration] approval, then I think that that really becomes a game-changer for this EOE population. Getting something that’s FDA approved to treat this disorder is a key unmet need,” said John Clarke, MD, who was not involved in the study.
He also pointed out that the safety profile of the drug appears good with respect to both candidiasis and adrenal suppression. “It at least seems comparable, if not better than what we’re currently doing with the inhaler,” said Dr. Clarke, a clinical professor of medicine and director of the esophagus program at Stanford University.
Current options for EOE are limited primarily to the use of proton pump inhibitors and food-elimination diets. Oral budesonide is available to patients in Europe and under investigation in the United States.
The new formulation (APT-1011, Ellodi Pharmaceuticals) is meant to be taken without water and dissolves on the tongue and then coats the esophagus.
In the phase 2b study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, researchers randomized 106 adults from six countries with EOE to receive one of four doses of APT-1011, or placebo. Participants had to have current symptoms of dysphagia and active disease after no histologic response from at least 8 weeks of high-dose (20-40 mg/day) proton pump inhibitors. The study included a placebo-controlled, 12-week induction period followed by 40 weeks of maintenance therapy with no placebo arm. The researchers considered a count of fewer than six eosinophils per high-powered field, as measured during an esophageal biopsy, to be a histologic response.
No patients in the placebo group had a response. The response rate was 80% among patients taking a 3-mg dose twice per day; 67% among those taking a 3-mg dose only at bedtime; 86% for those taking 1.5 mg twice per day; and 48% for 1.5 mg only at bedtime (P < .001 for all comparisons to placebo).
After 12 weeks, EOE Endoscopic Reference Score (EREFS) improved from 4.5 to 2.3 in the 3-mg b.i.d. group (5.3-2.1 for bedtime only), and from 4.6 to 1.7 for the 1.5-mg b.i.d. group (5.3-2.9 for 1.5 bedtime only). In the placebo group, the change was from 5.2 to 4.5.
Among those who responded during the induction period, the majority continued to be responders at weeks 26 and 52, including the 3-mg b.i.d. group (88% and 69%, respectively), the 3-mg bedtime-only group (79% and 64%), the 1.5-mg b.i.d. group (89% and 84%), and the 1.5-mg bedtime-only group (70% and 30%).
If approved, the new formulation will likely have a big impact on EOE patients, according to Dr. Fernandez-Becker. “The treatment that we decide on ultimately is through shared decision-making with the physician and the patient. I have many patients who want to go with diet, but it’s very difficult and it takes a long time to tailor the therapy, and many patients are not interested in proton pump inhibitors. So topical steroids are something that I prescribe a lot for patients,” she said.
The fact that the formulation is based on a drug with a known safety record is encouraging, but more research needs to be done. “I don’t expect that this would be any different, but that’s something that’s going to be studied,” said Dr. Fernandez-Becker.
The study was funded by Ellodi Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Clarke has no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Fernandez-Becker has no relevant financial disclosures but was a participant in the study.
A topical formulation of fluticasone designed to dissolve and coat the esophagus appears safe and effective for the treatment of eosinophilic esophagitis (EOE), according to new results from a phase 2b study. The results pave the way for phase 3 clinical trials.
Topical steroids are frequently used off-label for EOE. They may be repurposed from nebulizers used for asthma, with patients mixing the drugs themselves or sending them to a pharmacy to be compounded. Patients remove the spacer from a nebulizer in order to swallow the active compound or mix the liquid that would be nebulized with honey or Splenda to thicken it to maximize its contact with the esophagus. “Both of these things are very cumbersome and difficult. I get a lot of complaints from patients [that] it doesn’t taste good. So, the fact that we have a drug that we are already using, but it’s designed for the esophagus, is really exciting,” said Nielsen Fernandez-Becker, MD, PhD, of the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at Stanford (Calif.) University. Dr. Fernandez-Becker referred some patients to the trial and performed some procedures.
“I don’t think the findings are unexpected, given what we’ve seen with swallowed inhalers with fluticasone, but I think the real importance of this is that it does look like a dedicated swallow form works. And if this leads to [Food and Drug Administration] approval, then I think that that really becomes a game-changer for this EOE population. Getting something that’s FDA approved to treat this disorder is a key unmet need,” said John Clarke, MD, who was not involved in the study.
He also pointed out that the safety profile of the drug appears good with respect to both candidiasis and adrenal suppression. “It at least seems comparable, if not better than what we’re currently doing with the inhaler,” said Dr. Clarke, a clinical professor of medicine and director of the esophagus program at Stanford University.
Current options for EOE are limited primarily to the use of proton pump inhibitors and food-elimination diets. Oral budesonide is available to patients in Europe and under investigation in the United States.
The new formulation (APT-1011, Ellodi Pharmaceuticals) is meant to be taken without water and dissolves on the tongue and then coats the esophagus.
In the phase 2b study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, researchers randomized 106 adults from six countries with EOE to receive one of four doses of APT-1011, or placebo. Participants had to have current symptoms of dysphagia and active disease after no histologic response from at least 8 weeks of high-dose (20-40 mg/day) proton pump inhibitors. The study included a placebo-controlled, 12-week induction period followed by 40 weeks of maintenance therapy with no placebo arm. The researchers considered a count of fewer than six eosinophils per high-powered field, as measured during an esophageal biopsy, to be a histologic response.
No patients in the placebo group had a response. The response rate was 80% among patients taking a 3-mg dose twice per day; 67% among those taking a 3-mg dose only at bedtime; 86% for those taking 1.5 mg twice per day; and 48% for 1.5 mg only at bedtime (P < .001 for all comparisons to placebo).
After 12 weeks, EOE Endoscopic Reference Score (EREFS) improved from 4.5 to 2.3 in the 3-mg b.i.d. group (5.3-2.1 for bedtime only), and from 4.6 to 1.7 for the 1.5-mg b.i.d. group (5.3-2.9 for 1.5 bedtime only). In the placebo group, the change was from 5.2 to 4.5.
Among those who responded during the induction period, the majority continued to be responders at weeks 26 and 52, including the 3-mg b.i.d. group (88% and 69%, respectively), the 3-mg bedtime-only group (79% and 64%), the 1.5-mg b.i.d. group (89% and 84%), and the 1.5-mg bedtime-only group (70% and 30%).
If approved, the new formulation will likely have a big impact on EOE patients, according to Dr. Fernandez-Becker. “The treatment that we decide on ultimately is through shared decision-making with the physician and the patient. I have many patients who want to go with diet, but it’s very difficult and it takes a long time to tailor the therapy, and many patients are not interested in proton pump inhibitors. So topical steroids are something that I prescribe a lot for patients,” she said.
The fact that the formulation is based on a drug with a known safety record is encouraging, but more research needs to be done. “I don’t expect that this would be any different, but that’s something that’s going to be studied,” said Dr. Fernandez-Becker.
The study was funded by Ellodi Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Clarke has no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Fernandez-Becker has no relevant financial disclosures but was a participant in the study.
A topical formulation of fluticasone designed to dissolve and coat the esophagus appears safe and effective for the treatment of eosinophilic esophagitis (EOE), according to new results from a phase 2b study. The results pave the way for phase 3 clinical trials.
Topical steroids are frequently used off-label for EOE. They may be repurposed from nebulizers used for asthma, with patients mixing the drugs themselves or sending them to a pharmacy to be compounded. Patients remove the spacer from a nebulizer in order to swallow the active compound or mix the liquid that would be nebulized with honey or Splenda to thicken it to maximize its contact with the esophagus. “Both of these things are very cumbersome and difficult. I get a lot of complaints from patients [that] it doesn’t taste good. So, the fact that we have a drug that we are already using, but it’s designed for the esophagus, is really exciting,” said Nielsen Fernandez-Becker, MD, PhD, of the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at Stanford (Calif.) University. Dr. Fernandez-Becker referred some patients to the trial and performed some procedures.
“I don’t think the findings are unexpected, given what we’ve seen with swallowed inhalers with fluticasone, but I think the real importance of this is that it does look like a dedicated swallow form works. And if this leads to [Food and Drug Administration] approval, then I think that that really becomes a game-changer for this EOE population. Getting something that’s FDA approved to treat this disorder is a key unmet need,” said John Clarke, MD, who was not involved in the study.
He also pointed out that the safety profile of the drug appears good with respect to both candidiasis and adrenal suppression. “It at least seems comparable, if not better than what we’re currently doing with the inhaler,” said Dr. Clarke, a clinical professor of medicine and director of the esophagus program at Stanford University.
Current options for EOE are limited primarily to the use of proton pump inhibitors and food-elimination diets. Oral budesonide is available to patients in Europe and under investigation in the United States.
The new formulation (APT-1011, Ellodi Pharmaceuticals) is meant to be taken without water and dissolves on the tongue and then coats the esophagus.
In the phase 2b study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, researchers randomized 106 adults from six countries with EOE to receive one of four doses of APT-1011, or placebo. Participants had to have current symptoms of dysphagia and active disease after no histologic response from at least 8 weeks of high-dose (20-40 mg/day) proton pump inhibitors. The study included a placebo-controlled, 12-week induction period followed by 40 weeks of maintenance therapy with no placebo arm. The researchers considered a count of fewer than six eosinophils per high-powered field, as measured during an esophageal biopsy, to be a histologic response.
No patients in the placebo group had a response. The response rate was 80% among patients taking a 3-mg dose twice per day; 67% among those taking a 3-mg dose only at bedtime; 86% for those taking 1.5 mg twice per day; and 48% for 1.5 mg only at bedtime (P < .001 for all comparisons to placebo).
After 12 weeks, EOE Endoscopic Reference Score (EREFS) improved from 4.5 to 2.3 in the 3-mg b.i.d. group (5.3-2.1 for bedtime only), and from 4.6 to 1.7 for the 1.5-mg b.i.d. group (5.3-2.9 for 1.5 bedtime only). In the placebo group, the change was from 5.2 to 4.5.
Among those who responded during the induction period, the majority continued to be responders at weeks 26 and 52, including the 3-mg b.i.d. group (88% and 69%, respectively), the 3-mg bedtime-only group (79% and 64%), the 1.5-mg b.i.d. group (89% and 84%), and the 1.5-mg bedtime-only group (70% and 30%).
If approved, the new formulation will likely have a big impact on EOE patients, according to Dr. Fernandez-Becker. “The treatment that we decide on ultimately is through shared decision-making with the physician and the patient. I have many patients who want to go with diet, but it’s very difficult and it takes a long time to tailor the therapy, and many patients are not interested in proton pump inhibitors. So topical steroids are something that I prescribe a lot for patients,” she said.
The fact that the formulation is based on a drug with a known safety record is encouraging, but more research needs to be done. “I don’t expect that this would be any different, but that’s something that’s going to be studied,” said Dr. Fernandez-Becker.
The study was funded by Ellodi Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Clarke has no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Fernandez-Becker has no relevant financial disclosures but was a participant in the study.
FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY
AGA clinical practice update: Expert review on managing refractory gastroparesis
Gastroparesis can be tricky to diagnose and treat, in part because its symptoms can be difficult to distinguish from functional dyspepsia. A new clinical practice update from the American Gastroenterological Association aims to help physicians treat medically refractory gastroparesis with practical advice stemming from expert opinion and a literature review.
Although gastroparesis can be caused by known factors such as diabetes and medications, the largest group is idiopathic. The authors define medically refractory gastroparesis as symptoms that are not due to medication use, that continue despite dietary changes and first-line treatment with metoclopramide.
Although the authors outline several best practice advice statements on symptom identification and management, they acknowledge that much uncertainty still exists. “Our knowledge gap remains vast, and areas for future research include study of pathophysiology and etiology, as well as identification of clinical and investigation-based predictors of response to each management approach,” the authors wrote. Their report is in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
They also call for research to identify gastroparesis phenotypes that are most likely to respond to individual management approaches.
Common gastroparesis symptoms include nausea, vomiting, early satiety, bloating, postprandial fullness, abdominal pain, and weight loss. Many of these overlap with functional dyspepsia (FD). In fact, one study found that 42% of gastroparesis could be reclassified as having functional dyspepsia, and 37% of FD patients as having gastroparesis.
About 5 million adults in the United States, and 7.2% of the world population, report gastroparesis-like symptoms. The similarities between the two groups poses a significant diagnostic challenge. However, a careful history, physical exam, and appropriate diagnostic tests should allow the physician to rule out other conditions that may mimic gastroparesis. Repeating scintigraphy may change diagnosis from gastroparesis to FD or vice versa, but the authors note that this technique is often performed incorrectly and so should be conducted at centers that closely follow guidelines. They suggest a 4 hour meal-based test of gastric emptying over the wireless motility capsule because it provides a better physiological assessment.
They also suggest that treatment should focus on the most bothersome symptom, along with reducing the potential for complications such as esophagitis, malnutrition, and weight loss, as well as improving quality of life.
There are medications available for nausea and vomiting, although most have not been studied in large randomized controlled trials. These agents include domperidone, 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor antagonists, neurokinin receptor antagonists, and phenothiazine antipsychotics.
There are also medications available to increase the rate of gastric emptying. Erythromycin can be used intravenously or orally ahead of meals, while the 5-HT4 receptor agonist velusetrag improved gastric emptying in healthy volunteers with no sign of cardiac side effects. The commonly available 5-HT4 agonist prucalopride has also shown promise in improving gastric emptying.
For visceral pain, the authors suggest not using opioids because they may slow gastric emptying and increase pain perception. It is believed that neuromodulators such as tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) may reduce perception of pain, but there is limited high-quality evidence available for these therapies. The authors suggest that higher potency tertiary tricyclic amines such as amitriptyline or imipramine may be effective, particularly in diabetic gastroparesis since they provide relief in FD.
Nonpharmaceutical options include gastric electrical stimulation (GES), which improves refractory nausea and vomiting in some patients with gastroparesis, but does not accelerate gastric emptying. It may also improve glycemic control, nutritional status, and quality of life. The treatment may be well suited to opioid-free patients with refractory or intractable nausea and vomiting whose predominant symptom is not abdominal pain.
Other therapies focus on the pylorus and its role in gastric emptying, which can be impaired as a result of abnormalities of pyloric tone and pressure. Functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) can be used to probe pyloric tone and pressure, but it is expensive, invasive, and not widely available.
Outside of clinical trial settings, the authors advise against the use of intrapyloric botulinum toxic injection and transpyloric stent placement. Per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) has shown some efficacy at improving symptoms and reducing gastric emptying times, but it has not been studied in sham-controlled trials. The authors call the technique intriguing, but say it should not be considered a first-line therapy, and should be performed only at tertiary centers with expert motility specialists and endoscopists.
In extreme cases, enteral nutrition may be necessary, and a transjejunal tube or combined gastrojejunostomy tube should be emplaced beyond the pylorus. In a retrospective case series, patients experienced weight recovery with acceptable morbidity and mortality, and the implant was removed at an average of 20 months.
The authors have consulted or been on scientific advisory boards for Salix, Ironwood, Allergan, Arena, Allakos, Medtronic, Diversatek, Takeda, Quintiles, and IsoThrive.
This article was updated Feb. 17, 2022.
Gastroparesis can be tricky to diagnose and treat, in part because its symptoms can be difficult to distinguish from functional dyspepsia. A new clinical practice update from the American Gastroenterological Association aims to help physicians treat medically refractory gastroparesis with practical advice stemming from expert opinion and a literature review.
Although gastroparesis can be caused by known factors such as diabetes and medications, the largest group is idiopathic. The authors define medically refractory gastroparesis as symptoms that are not due to medication use, that continue despite dietary changes and first-line treatment with metoclopramide.
Although the authors outline several best practice advice statements on symptom identification and management, they acknowledge that much uncertainty still exists. “Our knowledge gap remains vast, and areas for future research include study of pathophysiology and etiology, as well as identification of clinical and investigation-based predictors of response to each management approach,” the authors wrote. Their report is in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
They also call for research to identify gastroparesis phenotypes that are most likely to respond to individual management approaches.
Common gastroparesis symptoms include nausea, vomiting, early satiety, bloating, postprandial fullness, abdominal pain, and weight loss. Many of these overlap with functional dyspepsia (FD). In fact, one study found that 42% of gastroparesis could be reclassified as having functional dyspepsia, and 37% of FD patients as having gastroparesis.
About 5 million adults in the United States, and 7.2% of the world population, report gastroparesis-like symptoms. The similarities between the two groups poses a significant diagnostic challenge. However, a careful history, physical exam, and appropriate diagnostic tests should allow the physician to rule out other conditions that may mimic gastroparesis. Repeating scintigraphy may change diagnosis from gastroparesis to FD or vice versa, but the authors note that this technique is often performed incorrectly and so should be conducted at centers that closely follow guidelines. They suggest a 4 hour meal-based test of gastric emptying over the wireless motility capsule because it provides a better physiological assessment.
They also suggest that treatment should focus on the most bothersome symptom, along with reducing the potential for complications such as esophagitis, malnutrition, and weight loss, as well as improving quality of life.
There are medications available for nausea and vomiting, although most have not been studied in large randomized controlled trials. These agents include domperidone, 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor antagonists, neurokinin receptor antagonists, and phenothiazine antipsychotics.
There are also medications available to increase the rate of gastric emptying. Erythromycin can be used intravenously or orally ahead of meals, while the 5-HT4 receptor agonist velusetrag improved gastric emptying in healthy volunteers with no sign of cardiac side effects. The commonly available 5-HT4 agonist prucalopride has also shown promise in improving gastric emptying.
For visceral pain, the authors suggest not using opioids because they may slow gastric emptying and increase pain perception. It is believed that neuromodulators such as tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) may reduce perception of pain, but there is limited high-quality evidence available for these therapies. The authors suggest that higher potency tertiary tricyclic amines such as amitriptyline or imipramine may be effective, particularly in diabetic gastroparesis since they provide relief in FD.
Nonpharmaceutical options include gastric electrical stimulation (GES), which improves refractory nausea and vomiting in some patients with gastroparesis, but does not accelerate gastric emptying. It may also improve glycemic control, nutritional status, and quality of life. The treatment may be well suited to opioid-free patients with refractory or intractable nausea and vomiting whose predominant symptom is not abdominal pain.
Other therapies focus on the pylorus and its role in gastric emptying, which can be impaired as a result of abnormalities of pyloric tone and pressure. Functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) can be used to probe pyloric tone and pressure, but it is expensive, invasive, and not widely available.
Outside of clinical trial settings, the authors advise against the use of intrapyloric botulinum toxic injection and transpyloric stent placement. Per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) has shown some efficacy at improving symptoms and reducing gastric emptying times, but it has not been studied in sham-controlled trials. The authors call the technique intriguing, but say it should not be considered a first-line therapy, and should be performed only at tertiary centers with expert motility specialists and endoscopists.
In extreme cases, enteral nutrition may be necessary, and a transjejunal tube or combined gastrojejunostomy tube should be emplaced beyond the pylorus. In a retrospective case series, patients experienced weight recovery with acceptable morbidity and mortality, and the implant was removed at an average of 20 months.
The authors have consulted or been on scientific advisory boards for Salix, Ironwood, Allergan, Arena, Allakos, Medtronic, Diversatek, Takeda, Quintiles, and IsoThrive.
This article was updated Feb. 17, 2022.
Gastroparesis can be tricky to diagnose and treat, in part because its symptoms can be difficult to distinguish from functional dyspepsia. A new clinical practice update from the American Gastroenterological Association aims to help physicians treat medically refractory gastroparesis with practical advice stemming from expert opinion and a literature review.
Although gastroparesis can be caused by known factors such as diabetes and medications, the largest group is idiopathic. The authors define medically refractory gastroparesis as symptoms that are not due to medication use, that continue despite dietary changes and first-line treatment with metoclopramide.
Although the authors outline several best practice advice statements on symptom identification and management, they acknowledge that much uncertainty still exists. “Our knowledge gap remains vast, and areas for future research include study of pathophysiology and etiology, as well as identification of clinical and investigation-based predictors of response to each management approach,” the authors wrote. Their report is in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
They also call for research to identify gastroparesis phenotypes that are most likely to respond to individual management approaches.
Common gastroparesis symptoms include nausea, vomiting, early satiety, bloating, postprandial fullness, abdominal pain, and weight loss. Many of these overlap with functional dyspepsia (FD). In fact, one study found that 42% of gastroparesis could be reclassified as having functional dyspepsia, and 37% of FD patients as having gastroparesis.
About 5 million adults in the United States, and 7.2% of the world population, report gastroparesis-like symptoms. The similarities between the two groups poses a significant diagnostic challenge. However, a careful history, physical exam, and appropriate diagnostic tests should allow the physician to rule out other conditions that may mimic gastroparesis. Repeating scintigraphy may change diagnosis from gastroparesis to FD or vice versa, but the authors note that this technique is often performed incorrectly and so should be conducted at centers that closely follow guidelines. They suggest a 4 hour meal-based test of gastric emptying over the wireless motility capsule because it provides a better physiological assessment.
They also suggest that treatment should focus on the most bothersome symptom, along with reducing the potential for complications such as esophagitis, malnutrition, and weight loss, as well as improving quality of life.
There are medications available for nausea and vomiting, although most have not been studied in large randomized controlled trials. These agents include domperidone, 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor antagonists, neurokinin receptor antagonists, and phenothiazine antipsychotics.
There are also medications available to increase the rate of gastric emptying. Erythromycin can be used intravenously or orally ahead of meals, while the 5-HT4 receptor agonist velusetrag improved gastric emptying in healthy volunteers with no sign of cardiac side effects. The commonly available 5-HT4 agonist prucalopride has also shown promise in improving gastric emptying.
For visceral pain, the authors suggest not using opioids because they may slow gastric emptying and increase pain perception. It is believed that neuromodulators such as tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) may reduce perception of pain, but there is limited high-quality evidence available for these therapies. The authors suggest that higher potency tertiary tricyclic amines such as amitriptyline or imipramine may be effective, particularly in diabetic gastroparesis since they provide relief in FD.
Nonpharmaceutical options include gastric electrical stimulation (GES), which improves refractory nausea and vomiting in some patients with gastroparesis, but does not accelerate gastric emptying. It may also improve glycemic control, nutritional status, and quality of life. The treatment may be well suited to opioid-free patients with refractory or intractable nausea and vomiting whose predominant symptom is not abdominal pain.
Other therapies focus on the pylorus and its role in gastric emptying, which can be impaired as a result of abnormalities of pyloric tone and pressure. Functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) can be used to probe pyloric tone and pressure, but it is expensive, invasive, and not widely available.
Outside of clinical trial settings, the authors advise against the use of intrapyloric botulinum toxic injection and transpyloric stent placement. Per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) has shown some efficacy at improving symptoms and reducing gastric emptying times, but it has not been studied in sham-controlled trials. The authors call the technique intriguing, but say it should not be considered a first-line therapy, and should be performed only at tertiary centers with expert motility specialists and endoscopists.
In extreme cases, enteral nutrition may be necessary, and a transjejunal tube or combined gastrojejunostomy tube should be emplaced beyond the pylorus. In a retrospective case series, patients experienced weight recovery with acceptable morbidity and mortality, and the implant was removed at an average of 20 months.
The authors have consulted or been on scientific advisory boards for Salix, Ironwood, Allergan, Arena, Allakos, Medtronic, Diversatek, Takeda, Quintiles, and IsoThrive.
This article was updated Feb. 17, 2022.
FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY
GERD: Upper endoscopy may reduce GI cancer mortality
Among individuals with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), a negative upper endoscopy is associated with decreased risk in incidence and mortality from gastrointestinal cancer. The benefit persisted through 5-10 years following the procedure.
The finding is similar to the survival benefit seen with colonoscopies and colorectal cancer, and may be attributable to endoscopic treatment of premalignant lesions.
“The relatively high incidence rate of upper gastrointestinal cancer in patients with GERD indicates that a one-time upper endoscopy may be beneficial,” wrote the authors, who were led by Dag Holmberg, MD, PhD, of the department of molecular medicine and surgery at the Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital, both in Stockholm. The study was published in Gastroenterology.
GERD is the most frequent reason patients undergo an upper endoscopy, but the results are often negative. It is generally a benign condition, but can lead to Barrett’s esophagus, as well as esophageal and gastric cardia adenocarcinoma. Upper endoscopy can identify other esophageal cancers like gastric noncardia cancer and duodenal cancer, which may cause dyspepsia or GERD-like symptoms.
To determine the potential benefit of upper endoscopy, the researchers conducted a population-based, four-nation cohort study that included 1,062,740 individuals with GERD in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. The data were gathered from national patient registries, cancer registries, and cause of death registries. The study encompassed data from 1979 through the end of 2018.
The median age was 58 years, and 52% of participants were women.
The researchers defined a negative endoscopy as no diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer within 6 months of the procedure; 69.3% of procedures were negative.
During the follow-up period, 0.34% of participants developed and 0.27% died of upper gastrointestinal cancer. Among those with negative endoscopies, 0.23% developed and 0.22% died from upper gastrointestinal cancer.
Participants with a negative endoscopy had a lower risk of being diagnosed with upper gastrointestinal cancer during the follow-up period (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.45; 95% confidence interval, 0.43-0.48). The reduction in risk was similar across age sexes and age groups, but among procedures performed after 2008, the risk reduction was even higher (aHR, 0.34; P < .001).
The effect was strongest in the first year after the procedure, but it persisted out to 5 years before returning to baseline risk levels.
A negative endoscopy was also associated with decreased mortality risk from upper gastrointestinal cancer versus those who hadn’t had an endoscopy (aHR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.37-0.42). The protective value continued for at least 10 years.
Esophageal adenocarcinoma developed in 0.12% of participants, and 0.10% died of the disease. Among those with a negative endoscopy, 0.09% developed adenocarcinoma, and 0.07% died (aHR vs. no upper endoscopy, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.30-0.37).
The rapid return to baseline risk was notable, and different from what occurs after negative colonoscopies. However, new tumors can readily form within one year, and the risk may reflect early malignant or premalignant lesions that were missed during the procedure.
In fact, a meta-analysis found that 11.3% of upper gastrointestinal cancers had escaped detection during an endoscopy in the previous 3 years before diagnosis, and case reviews of patients diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancer soon after an upper endoscopy usually reveal suspicious or indeterminate results that the endoscopist or pathologist missed.
Quality indicators for upper endoscopy include procedure time, rate of targeted biopsies, and computer-aided detection, but it isn’t clear what impact these measures have on outcomes. However, the greater risk reduction found with endoscopies performed more recently suggests that newer quality indicators and technological improvements may be improving outcomes.
The relatively low incidence of esophageal and gastric cancer in Western countries has discouraged widespread adoption of endoscopic screening, but the researchers point out that the risk of gastrointestinal cancer among individuals with GERD is similar to the risk of colorectal cancer in the 60-69 age group in the United States, for whom colonoscopy is recommended.
“The present study indicates that upper endoscopy may be beneficial for patients with GERD, but to make upper endoscopy screening more cost beneficial at its initiation, the target group may be limited to include patients at highest risk of cancer. Such previous cost-effectiveness studies have indicated that endoscopy is cost effective in men at aged 50 years or older with chronic GERD,” the authors wrote.
The study was funded by Swedish Research Council and Swedish Cancer Society. The authors disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
This study from Holmberg and colleagues has the potential to revolutionize future clinical guidelines determining endoscopic investigations for GERD patients.
The cohort for analysis is staggering in magnitude: The authors analyzed real-world data from over 1 million participants with GERD in four Scandinavian databases. The results show strong and precise reductions in both risk and mortality from upper gastrointestinal cancer in the whole cohort. This reduction was consistent across all subgroup and sensitivity analyses.
These findings are important as GERD alone does not necessarily warrant an upper endoscopy investigation in current practice. This study provides strong evidence that a one-off endoscopic investigation in patients with GERD could bring meaningful opportunities for early detection of esophageal and gastric cancers – and in turn lead to fewer patients dying from these tumors. The immediacy of the return for investment is also impressive; with the risk reduction being strongest in the first few years of follow-up.
The elusive next step, as highlighted by the authors, is to ensure implementation of endoscopic screening can be done in a cost-effective manner. This is even more important because many health care systems across the world struggle with endoscopy capacity during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Helen Coleman, PhD, BSc(Hons), is a professor of cancer epidemiology at Queen’s University Belfast (Northern Ireland); joint deputy director of the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; a Cancer Research UK Fellow; and a visiting scientist with the Fitzgerald Lab at the University of Cambridge (England). She has no conflicts.
This study from Holmberg and colleagues has the potential to revolutionize future clinical guidelines determining endoscopic investigations for GERD patients.
The cohort for analysis is staggering in magnitude: The authors analyzed real-world data from over 1 million participants with GERD in four Scandinavian databases. The results show strong and precise reductions in both risk and mortality from upper gastrointestinal cancer in the whole cohort. This reduction was consistent across all subgroup and sensitivity analyses.
These findings are important as GERD alone does not necessarily warrant an upper endoscopy investigation in current practice. This study provides strong evidence that a one-off endoscopic investigation in patients with GERD could bring meaningful opportunities for early detection of esophageal and gastric cancers – and in turn lead to fewer patients dying from these tumors. The immediacy of the return for investment is also impressive; with the risk reduction being strongest in the first few years of follow-up.
The elusive next step, as highlighted by the authors, is to ensure implementation of endoscopic screening can be done in a cost-effective manner. This is even more important because many health care systems across the world struggle with endoscopy capacity during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Helen Coleman, PhD, BSc(Hons), is a professor of cancer epidemiology at Queen’s University Belfast (Northern Ireland); joint deputy director of the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; a Cancer Research UK Fellow; and a visiting scientist with the Fitzgerald Lab at the University of Cambridge (England). She has no conflicts.
This study from Holmberg and colleagues has the potential to revolutionize future clinical guidelines determining endoscopic investigations for GERD patients.
The cohort for analysis is staggering in magnitude: The authors analyzed real-world data from over 1 million participants with GERD in four Scandinavian databases. The results show strong and precise reductions in both risk and mortality from upper gastrointestinal cancer in the whole cohort. This reduction was consistent across all subgroup and sensitivity analyses.
These findings are important as GERD alone does not necessarily warrant an upper endoscopy investigation in current practice. This study provides strong evidence that a one-off endoscopic investigation in patients with GERD could bring meaningful opportunities for early detection of esophageal and gastric cancers – and in turn lead to fewer patients dying from these tumors. The immediacy of the return for investment is also impressive; with the risk reduction being strongest in the first few years of follow-up.
The elusive next step, as highlighted by the authors, is to ensure implementation of endoscopic screening can be done in a cost-effective manner. This is even more important because many health care systems across the world struggle with endoscopy capacity during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Helen Coleman, PhD, BSc(Hons), is a professor of cancer epidemiology at Queen’s University Belfast (Northern Ireland); joint deputy director of the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; a Cancer Research UK Fellow; and a visiting scientist with the Fitzgerald Lab at the University of Cambridge (England). She has no conflicts.
Among individuals with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), a negative upper endoscopy is associated with decreased risk in incidence and mortality from gastrointestinal cancer. The benefit persisted through 5-10 years following the procedure.
The finding is similar to the survival benefit seen with colonoscopies and colorectal cancer, and may be attributable to endoscopic treatment of premalignant lesions.
“The relatively high incidence rate of upper gastrointestinal cancer in patients with GERD indicates that a one-time upper endoscopy may be beneficial,” wrote the authors, who were led by Dag Holmberg, MD, PhD, of the department of molecular medicine and surgery at the Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital, both in Stockholm. The study was published in Gastroenterology.
GERD is the most frequent reason patients undergo an upper endoscopy, but the results are often negative. It is generally a benign condition, but can lead to Barrett’s esophagus, as well as esophageal and gastric cardia adenocarcinoma. Upper endoscopy can identify other esophageal cancers like gastric noncardia cancer and duodenal cancer, which may cause dyspepsia or GERD-like symptoms.
To determine the potential benefit of upper endoscopy, the researchers conducted a population-based, four-nation cohort study that included 1,062,740 individuals with GERD in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. The data were gathered from national patient registries, cancer registries, and cause of death registries. The study encompassed data from 1979 through the end of 2018.
The median age was 58 years, and 52% of participants were women.
The researchers defined a negative endoscopy as no diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer within 6 months of the procedure; 69.3% of procedures were negative.
During the follow-up period, 0.34% of participants developed and 0.27% died of upper gastrointestinal cancer. Among those with negative endoscopies, 0.23% developed and 0.22% died from upper gastrointestinal cancer.
Participants with a negative endoscopy had a lower risk of being diagnosed with upper gastrointestinal cancer during the follow-up period (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.45; 95% confidence interval, 0.43-0.48). The reduction in risk was similar across age sexes and age groups, but among procedures performed after 2008, the risk reduction was even higher (aHR, 0.34; P < .001).
The effect was strongest in the first year after the procedure, but it persisted out to 5 years before returning to baseline risk levels.
A negative endoscopy was also associated with decreased mortality risk from upper gastrointestinal cancer versus those who hadn’t had an endoscopy (aHR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.37-0.42). The protective value continued for at least 10 years.
Esophageal adenocarcinoma developed in 0.12% of participants, and 0.10% died of the disease. Among those with a negative endoscopy, 0.09% developed adenocarcinoma, and 0.07% died (aHR vs. no upper endoscopy, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.30-0.37).
The rapid return to baseline risk was notable, and different from what occurs after negative colonoscopies. However, new tumors can readily form within one year, and the risk may reflect early malignant or premalignant lesions that were missed during the procedure.
In fact, a meta-analysis found that 11.3% of upper gastrointestinal cancers had escaped detection during an endoscopy in the previous 3 years before diagnosis, and case reviews of patients diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancer soon after an upper endoscopy usually reveal suspicious or indeterminate results that the endoscopist or pathologist missed.
Quality indicators for upper endoscopy include procedure time, rate of targeted biopsies, and computer-aided detection, but it isn’t clear what impact these measures have on outcomes. However, the greater risk reduction found with endoscopies performed more recently suggests that newer quality indicators and technological improvements may be improving outcomes.
The relatively low incidence of esophageal and gastric cancer in Western countries has discouraged widespread adoption of endoscopic screening, but the researchers point out that the risk of gastrointestinal cancer among individuals with GERD is similar to the risk of colorectal cancer in the 60-69 age group in the United States, for whom colonoscopy is recommended.
“The present study indicates that upper endoscopy may be beneficial for patients with GERD, but to make upper endoscopy screening more cost beneficial at its initiation, the target group may be limited to include patients at highest risk of cancer. Such previous cost-effectiveness studies have indicated that endoscopy is cost effective in men at aged 50 years or older with chronic GERD,” the authors wrote.
The study was funded by Swedish Research Council and Swedish Cancer Society. The authors disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
Among individuals with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), a negative upper endoscopy is associated with decreased risk in incidence and mortality from gastrointestinal cancer. The benefit persisted through 5-10 years following the procedure.
The finding is similar to the survival benefit seen with colonoscopies and colorectal cancer, and may be attributable to endoscopic treatment of premalignant lesions.
“The relatively high incidence rate of upper gastrointestinal cancer in patients with GERD indicates that a one-time upper endoscopy may be beneficial,” wrote the authors, who were led by Dag Holmberg, MD, PhD, of the department of molecular medicine and surgery at the Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital, both in Stockholm. The study was published in Gastroenterology.
GERD is the most frequent reason patients undergo an upper endoscopy, but the results are often negative. It is generally a benign condition, but can lead to Barrett’s esophagus, as well as esophageal and gastric cardia adenocarcinoma. Upper endoscopy can identify other esophageal cancers like gastric noncardia cancer and duodenal cancer, which may cause dyspepsia or GERD-like symptoms.
To determine the potential benefit of upper endoscopy, the researchers conducted a population-based, four-nation cohort study that included 1,062,740 individuals with GERD in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. The data were gathered from national patient registries, cancer registries, and cause of death registries. The study encompassed data from 1979 through the end of 2018.
The median age was 58 years, and 52% of participants were women.
The researchers defined a negative endoscopy as no diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer within 6 months of the procedure; 69.3% of procedures were negative.
During the follow-up period, 0.34% of participants developed and 0.27% died of upper gastrointestinal cancer. Among those with negative endoscopies, 0.23% developed and 0.22% died from upper gastrointestinal cancer.
Participants with a negative endoscopy had a lower risk of being diagnosed with upper gastrointestinal cancer during the follow-up period (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.45; 95% confidence interval, 0.43-0.48). The reduction in risk was similar across age sexes and age groups, but among procedures performed after 2008, the risk reduction was even higher (aHR, 0.34; P < .001).
The effect was strongest in the first year after the procedure, but it persisted out to 5 years before returning to baseline risk levels.
A negative endoscopy was also associated with decreased mortality risk from upper gastrointestinal cancer versus those who hadn’t had an endoscopy (aHR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.37-0.42). The protective value continued for at least 10 years.
Esophageal adenocarcinoma developed in 0.12% of participants, and 0.10% died of the disease. Among those with a negative endoscopy, 0.09% developed adenocarcinoma, and 0.07% died (aHR vs. no upper endoscopy, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.30-0.37).
The rapid return to baseline risk was notable, and different from what occurs after negative colonoscopies. However, new tumors can readily form within one year, and the risk may reflect early malignant or premalignant lesions that were missed during the procedure.
In fact, a meta-analysis found that 11.3% of upper gastrointestinal cancers had escaped detection during an endoscopy in the previous 3 years before diagnosis, and case reviews of patients diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancer soon after an upper endoscopy usually reveal suspicious or indeterminate results that the endoscopist or pathologist missed.
Quality indicators for upper endoscopy include procedure time, rate of targeted biopsies, and computer-aided detection, but it isn’t clear what impact these measures have on outcomes. However, the greater risk reduction found with endoscopies performed more recently suggests that newer quality indicators and technological improvements may be improving outcomes.
The relatively low incidence of esophageal and gastric cancer in Western countries has discouraged widespread adoption of endoscopic screening, but the researchers point out that the risk of gastrointestinal cancer among individuals with GERD is similar to the risk of colorectal cancer in the 60-69 age group in the United States, for whom colonoscopy is recommended.
“The present study indicates that upper endoscopy may be beneficial for patients with GERD, but to make upper endoscopy screening more cost beneficial at its initiation, the target group may be limited to include patients at highest risk of cancer. Such previous cost-effectiveness studies have indicated that endoscopy is cost effective in men at aged 50 years or older with chronic GERD,” the authors wrote.
The study was funded by Swedish Research Council and Swedish Cancer Society. The authors disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY
Hemostatic powder noninferior in nonvariceal upper GI bleeds
TC-325, a bentonite-derived hemostatic powder, was not inferior to standard therapy for the endoscopic management of acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, according to a new study.
The findings from the study, lead investigator and study author James Y.W. Lau, MD, of the Prince of Wales Hospital in Hong Kong, said in an interview, suggest TC-325 could “be considered one of the primary endoscopic treatments to actively stop nonvariceal bleeding,” particularly in cases when other therapies prove unsuccessful. The study findings were published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
The study team noted that, after they first reported the use of TC-325 in active bleeding from gastroduodenal ulcers in 2011, there have been other studies of its use with acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, but to date there has been only two randomized controlled trials of it as a sole endoscopic treatment option for acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding. To close this research gap, Dr. Lau and researchers enrolled 224 adult patients with acute bleeding from a nonvariceal source on upper GI endoscopy and randomly assigned these patients to receive either TC-325 (n = 111) or standard hemostatic treatment (n = 113). Standard endoscopic bleeding management consisted of contact thermocoagulation using a heater probe or bipolar probe, or hemoclipping with or without previously injected diluted epinephrine.
Success of assigned treatment was defined by the cessation of active bleeding as well as flattening of the protuberance or vessel with a heater or bipolar probe. For the primary outcome of the study, the investigators assessed the rate of bleeding control within 30 days following randomization. Additionally, the researchers compared the treatment groups to identify differences in the failure to control bleeding during the initial endoscopy and recurrent bleeding following hemostasis.
Treatment groups were even in regard to the proportions of patients with bleeding gastroduodenal ulcers (61.3% vs. 60.2%). A smaller proportion of patients in the TC-325 arm had a history of alcohol use (3.0% vs. 9.8%) and current use of NSAIDs (8.1% vs. 20.4%). The group assigned to TC-325 had more bleeding tumors (20.7% vs. 8.8%) and fewer Dieulafoy lesions (5.4% vs. 14.2%), compared with the standard treatment arm. Additionally, patients in the TC-325 group had a higher median Glasgow-Blatchford Score at hospital admission than the standard endoscopy management group (12 vs. 11, respectively; P < .05).
Although a greater proportion of patients assigned TC-325 had bleeding controlled within 30 days of randomization (90.1% vs. 81.4%; risk difference, 8.7 percentage points; 1-sided 95% CI, 0.95 percentage points), the researchers noted that the lower limit of the confidence interval for treatment difference “did not extend beyond the prespecified noninferiority margin of 10 percentage points, indicating that TC-325 is not inferior to standard treatment in the control of bleeding.”
Fewer failures of hemostasis were observed with TC-325 during index endoscopy (2.7% vs. 9.7%; odds ratio, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.07-0.95). After initial endoscopic control, recurrent bleeding was observed in 9 patients in the TC-325 arm and 10 patients in the standard treatment group.
The authors suggested that the low recurrent bleeding rate in the TC-325 arm may reflect enhanced responsiveness in the predominantly Asian study population, a group with lower parietal cell masses and higher rates of Helicobacter pylori infections. In an accompanying editorial published online in Annals of Internal Medicine, Alan N. Barkun, MD, McGill University and McGill University Health Centre in Montreal, and Ali Alali, MB BCh BAO, in the department of medicine at Kuwait University, Kuwait City, noted that “possible additional reasons for the enhanced effectiveness of TC-325 observed in the current trial may be its varied performance in the patients with nonulcer bleeding.”
No difference was found between the treatment strategies in terms of the need for additional interventions within 30 days. The need for further endoscopic treatment was reported in 7.2% of patients in the TC-325 groups versus 8.8% of patients assigned to standard treatment. In addition, further angiography was required in 1.8% and 3.5% of patients, while further surgery was required in 0.9% of patients treated with TC-325 versus none in the standard treatment group. Each group reported 14 deaths.
Dr. Lau noted that the study enrolled Asian patients who were more responsive to proton pump inhibitor therapy, which may limit the generalizability of the findings. “We also included patients with mixed etiologies,” he added. “Studies that focus on specific lesions would further inform our practice, and larger observational studies are required to understand failures with TC-325.”
Based on the study findings, corresponding editorial author Dr. Barkun wrote that “TC-325 can be used alone in nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding or as rescue therapy but should be reserved for patients with actively bleeding lesions” and suggests the treatment option “is likely one of the most effective modalities in achieving immediate hemostasis.”
The researchers reported no conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry. The editorialists also reported no disclosures of interest.
TC-325, a bentonite-derived hemostatic powder, was not inferior to standard therapy for the endoscopic management of acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, according to a new study.
The findings from the study, lead investigator and study author James Y.W. Lau, MD, of the Prince of Wales Hospital in Hong Kong, said in an interview, suggest TC-325 could “be considered one of the primary endoscopic treatments to actively stop nonvariceal bleeding,” particularly in cases when other therapies prove unsuccessful. The study findings were published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
The study team noted that, after they first reported the use of TC-325 in active bleeding from gastroduodenal ulcers in 2011, there have been other studies of its use with acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, but to date there has been only two randomized controlled trials of it as a sole endoscopic treatment option for acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding. To close this research gap, Dr. Lau and researchers enrolled 224 adult patients with acute bleeding from a nonvariceal source on upper GI endoscopy and randomly assigned these patients to receive either TC-325 (n = 111) or standard hemostatic treatment (n = 113). Standard endoscopic bleeding management consisted of contact thermocoagulation using a heater probe or bipolar probe, or hemoclipping with or without previously injected diluted epinephrine.
Success of assigned treatment was defined by the cessation of active bleeding as well as flattening of the protuberance or vessel with a heater or bipolar probe. For the primary outcome of the study, the investigators assessed the rate of bleeding control within 30 days following randomization. Additionally, the researchers compared the treatment groups to identify differences in the failure to control bleeding during the initial endoscopy and recurrent bleeding following hemostasis.
Treatment groups were even in regard to the proportions of patients with bleeding gastroduodenal ulcers (61.3% vs. 60.2%). A smaller proportion of patients in the TC-325 arm had a history of alcohol use (3.0% vs. 9.8%) and current use of NSAIDs (8.1% vs. 20.4%). The group assigned to TC-325 had more bleeding tumors (20.7% vs. 8.8%) and fewer Dieulafoy lesions (5.4% vs. 14.2%), compared with the standard treatment arm. Additionally, patients in the TC-325 group had a higher median Glasgow-Blatchford Score at hospital admission than the standard endoscopy management group (12 vs. 11, respectively; P < .05).
Although a greater proportion of patients assigned TC-325 had bleeding controlled within 30 days of randomization (90.1% vs. 81.4%; risk difference, 8.7 percentage points; 1-sided 95% CI, 0.95 percentage points), the researchers noted that the lower limit of the confidence interval for treatment difference “did not extend beyond the prespecified noninferiority margin of 10 percentage points, indicating that TC-325 is not inferior to standard treatment in the control of bleeding.”
Fewer failures of hemostasis were observed with TC-325 during index endoscopy (2.7% vs. 9.7%; odds ratio, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.07-0.95). After initial endoscopic control, recurrent bleeding was observed in 9 patients in the TC-325 arm and 10 patients in the standard treatment group.
The authors suggested that the low recurrent bleeding rate in the TC-325 arm may reflect enhanced responsiveness in the predominantly Asian study population, a group with lower parietal cell masses and higher rates of Helicobacter pylori infections. In an accompanying editorial published online in Annals of Internal Medicine, Alan N. Barkun, MD, McGill University and McGill University Health Centre in Montreal, and Ali Alali, MB BCh BAO, in the department of medicine at Kuwait University, Kuwait City, noted that “possible additional reasons for the enhanced effectiveness of TC-325 observed in the current trial may be its varied performance in the patients with nonulcer bleeding.”
No difference was found between the treatment strategies in terms of the need for additional interventions within 30 days. The need for further endoscopic treatment was reported in 7.2% of patients in the TC-325 groups versus 8.8% of patients assigned to standard treatment. In addition, further angiography was required in 1.8% and 3.5% of patients, while further surgery was required in 0.9% of patients treated with TC-325 versus none in the standard treatment group. Each group reported 14 deaths.
Dr. Lau noted that the study enrolled Asian patients who were more responsive to proton pump inhibitor therapy, which may limit the generalizability of the findings. “We also included patients with mixed etiologies,” he added. “Studies that focus on specific lesions would further inform our practice, and larger observational studies are required to understand failures with TC-325.”
Based on the study findings, corresponding editorial author Dr. Barkun wrote that “TC-325 can be used alone in nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding or as rescue therapy but should be reserved for patients with actively bleeding lesions” and suggests the treatment option “is likely one of the most effective modalities in achieving immediate hemostasis.”
The researchers reported no conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry. The editorialists also reported no disclosures of interest.
TC-325, a bentonite-derived hemostatic powder, was not inferior to standard therapy for the endoscopic management of acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, according to a new study.
The findings from the study, lead investigator and study author James Y.W. Lau, MD, of the Prince of Wales Hospital in Hong Kong, said in an interview, suggest TC-325 could “be considered one of the primary endoscopic treatments to actively stop nonvariceal bleeding,” particularly in cases when other therapies prove unsuccessful. The study findings were published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
The study team noted that, after they first reported the use of TC-325 in active bleeding from gastroduodenal ulcers in 2011, there have been other studies of its use with acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, but to date there has been only two randomized controlled trials of it as a sole endoscopic treatment option for acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding. To close this research gap, Dr. Lau and researchers enrolled 224 adult patients with acute bleeding from a nonvariceal source on upper GI endoscopy and randomly assigned these patients to receive either TC-325 (n = 111) or standard hemostatic treatment (n = 113). Standard endoscopic bleeding management consisted of contact thermocoagulation using a heater probe or bipolar probe, or hemoclipping with or without previously injected diluted epinephrine.
Success of assigned treatment was defined by the cessation of active bleeding as well as flattening of the protuberance or vessel with a heater or bipolar probe. For the primary outcome of the study, the investigators assessed the rate of bleeding control within 30 days following randomization. Additionally, the researchers compared the treatment groups to identify differences in the failure to control bleeding during the initial endoscopy and recurrent bleeding following hemostasis.
Treatment groups were even in regard to the proportions of patients with bleeding gastroduodenal ulcers (61.3% vs. 60.2%). A smaller proportion of patients in the TC-325 arm had a history of alcohol use (3.0% vs. 9.8%) and current use of NSAIDs (8.1% vs. 20.4%). The group assigned to TC-325 had more bleeding tumors (20.7% vs. 8.8%) and fewer Dieulafoy lesions (5.4% vs. 14.2%), compared with the standard treatment arm. Additionally, patients in the TC-325 group had a higher median Glasgow-Blatchford Score at hospital admission than the standard endoscopy management group (12 vs. 11, respectively; P < .05).
Although a greater proportion of patients assigned TC-325 had bleeding controlled within 30 days of randomization (90.1% vs. 81.4%; risk difference, 8.7 percentage points; 1-sided 95% CI, 0.95 percentage points), the researchers noted that the lower limit of the confidence interval for treatment difference “did not extend beyond the prespecified noninferiority margin of 10 percentage points, indicating that TC-325 is not inferior to standard treatment in the control of bleeding.”
Fewer failures of hemostasis were observed with TC-325 during index endoscopy (2.7% vs. 9.7%; odds ratio, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.07-0.95). After initial endoscopic control, recurrent bleeding was observed in 9 patients in the TC-325 arm and 10 patients in the standard treatment group.
The authors suggested that the low recurrent bleeding rate in the TC-325 arm may reflect enhanced responsiveness in the predominantly Asian study population, a group with lower parietal cell masses and higher rates of Helicobacter pylori infections. In an accompanying editorial published online in Annals of Internal Medicine, Alan N. Barkun, MD, McGill University and McGill University Health Centre in Montreal, and Ali Alali, MB BCh BAO, in the department of medicine at Kuwait University, Kuwait City, noted that “possible additional reasons for the enhanced effectiveness of TC-325 observed in the current trial may be its varied performance in the patients with nonulcer bleeding.”
No difference was found between the treatment strategies in terms of the need for additional interventions within 30 days. The need for further endoscopic treatment was reported in 7.2% of patients in the TC-325 groups versus 8.8% of patients assigned to standard treatment. In addition, further angiography was required in 1.8% and 3.5% of patients, while further surgery was required in 0.9% of patients treated with TC-325 versus none in the standard treatment group. Each group reported 14 deaths.
Dr. Lau noted that the study enrolled Asian patients who were more responsive to proton pump inhibitor therapy, which may limit the generalizability of the findings. “We also included patients with mixed etiologies,” he added. “Studies that focus on specific lesions would further inform our practice, and larger observational studies are required to understand failures with TC-325.”
Based on the study findings, corresponding editorial author Dr. Barkun wrote that “TC-325 can be used alone in nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding or as rescue therapy but should be reserved for patients with actively bleeding lesions” and suggests the treatment option “is likely one of the most effective modalities in achieving immediate hemostasis.”
The researchers reported no conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry. The editorialists also reported no disclosures of interest.
FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Vonoprazan beats PPIs in H. pylori eradication
LAS VEGAS – In the treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection, combination therapies using the oral potassium-competitive acid blocker vonoprazan were superior to standard proton pump inhibitor (PPI)–based triple therapy, producing higher eradication rates, according to combined data from a U.S. and a European phase 3 randomized, controlled trial.
Vonoprazan has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration for approval with a Fast Track designation in combination with amoxicillin and clarithromycin (triple therapy) or amoxicillin alone (dual therapy) for treating H. pylori infection. It has already been approved in Japan for the treatment of gastric and duodenal ulcers, reflux esophagitis, secondary prevention of low-dose aspirin– or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug–induced gastric mucosal damage, and for first and second-line H. pylori eradication therapy.
Study details
The study included 1,046 treatment-naive patients who had dyspepsia, a recent or new diagnosis of a nonbleeding peptic ulcer, a history of a peptic ulcer, or long-term stable use of an NSAID. Patients were randomized to PPI-based triple therapy (lansoprazole, amoxicillin, clarithromycin), vonoprazan triple therapy (plus amoxicillin, clarithromycin), or vonoprazan dual therapy (amoxicillin). The treatment period was 14 days, followed by 13C urea breath test (UBT) 4 weeks after treatment.
The researchers conducted several analyses, including: Modified intention-to-treat analyses, which included all enrollees; per protocol analyses, which included patients who took at least 75% of each study medication and underwent 13C UBT in the expected time frame; and a safety population of all patients who took at least one study drug.
Among patients with H. pylori strains that were not resistant to clarithromycin, the PPI-based triple-therapy group had an eradication rate of 78.8%, compared with 84.7% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (P < .0001), and 78.5% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (P = .0037). In the per protocol analysis, PPI-based triple therapy eradicated H. pylori 82.1% of the time, compared with 90.4% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (P < .0001) and 81.2% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (P = .0077). Both vonoprazan treatment groups were noninferior to PPI-based triple therapy.
A prespecified exploratory analysis found that vonoprazan triple therapy outperformed PPI-based triple therapy in the modified intention-to-treat population (P = .0408) and the per protocol population (P = .0059).
Among patients with clarithromycin-resistant strains of H. pylori, in the modified intention-to-treat population, 31.9% achieved eradication with PPI triple therapy, compared with 65.8% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group, and 69.6% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group. In the per protocol population, the numbers were 29.0% versus 67.2% and 79.5%, respectively (P < .0001 for both versus PPI triple therapy).
Among all patients, in the modified intention-to-treat population, 68.5% achieved eradication with PPI triple therapy, 80.8% with vonoprazan triple therapy (P =. 0001), and 77.2% with vonoprazan dual therapy (P = .0063)*. In the per protocol population, the numbers were 70.0%, 85.7% (P < .0001), and 81.1% (P = .0013), respectively.
Safety outcomes were similar among the three groups, with treatment-emergent adverse events occurring in 34.5% of the PPI triple-therapy group (1.2% discontinued), 34.1% of the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (2.3% discontinued), and 29.9% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (0.9% discontinued).
Fighting against resistance
The efficacy of PPI-based clarithromycin-based triple therapy has fallen below 80% in the United States and Europe over the past few decades, largely because of antibiotic resistance, said William Chey, MD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology. Dr. Chey is a professor of medicine and director of the GI physiology laboratory at Michigan Medicine.
Vonoprazan is more stable in acid than are PPIs, and produces greater and more durable acid reduction, according to Dr. Chey. That’s important for two reasons: One is that some antibiotics are acid-labile, and so may have their efficacy directly impacted in a more acidic environment. The other factor is that most antibiotics work better on bacteria that are actively replicating, and H. pylori reproduces better in a more neutral environment. “So, you increase the replication, you increase the bioavailability of the antibiotics. And therefore, hopefully, that underlies why we see it working better in the patients with [antibiotic] resistance,” Dr. Chey said in an interview.
It remains to be seen whether or not the drug will receive FDA approval, but he pointed to other regimens like bismuth quadruple therapy and rifabutin-based triple therapy that are already available. “If I had the choice, I would never use a PPI-based triple therapy again. People should not be doing that,” said Dr. Chey.
“More successful H. pylori eradication regimens are certainly needed, and these results are particularly relevant and interesting given the increasing failure of initial treatment regimens,” said Kimberly Harer, MD, who moderated the session. She noted that the secondary analysis of patients with clarithromycin-resistant infections was particularly relevant. “The superiority analysis indicating vonoprazan triple therapy resulted in increased H. pylori eradication compared to lanzoprazole triple therapy was especially interesting,” said Dr. Harer, who is a clinical lecturer at University of Michigan Health, Ann Arbor.
One downside to the study is that it didn’t compare vonoprazan combinations to quadruple therapy of a PPI, bismuth, tetracycline, and a nitroimidazole, said Joseph Jennings, MD, who was asked to comment on the study. Other treatment approaches include sequential antibiotics and other combinations. Dr. Jennings also highlighted the findings that the vonoprazan regimens were superior against clarithromycin-resistant strains. “The more different regimens we can add to the armamentarium, the better chance we have because the resistant patterns fluctuate all throughout the world,” said Dr. Jennings, who is an assistant professor of medicine at Georgetown University and director of the center for GI bleeding at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, both in Washington.
He also pointed out that physicians can face a conundrum when patients fail multiple lines of therapy and have testing done that shows high levels of resistance. Some have allergies that prevent them from turning to other antibiotics. “That’s a market where lots of doctors struggle. Something like this would be a nice add-on,” said Dr. Jennings.
The study was funded by Phathom Pharmaceuticals.** Dr. Chey has consulted and/or received research support from Abbvie, Alfasigma, Allakos, Alnylam, Bayer, Bioamerica, Cosmo, Intrinsic Medicine, Ironwood, Modify Health, My GI Health, My Nutrition Health, Nestle, Phathom Pharmaceuticals, QOL Medical, Redhill, Salix/Valeant, Takeda, Urovant, and Vibrant. Dr. Harer and Dr. Jennings have no relevant financial disclosures.
*Correction, 10/29/21: An earlier version of this article misstated the percentage of patients in the modified intention-to-treat population who achieved eradication with vonoprazan triple therapy.
**Correction, 10/29/21: An earlier version of this article misstated the name of Phathom Pharmaceuticals.
LAS VEGAS – In the treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection, combination therapies using the oral potassium-competitive acid blocker vonoprazan were superior to standard proton pump inhibitor (PPI)–based triple therapy, producing higher eradication rates, according to combined data from a U.S. and a European phase 3 randomized, controlled trial.
Vonoprazan has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration for approval with a Fast Track designation in combination with amoxicillin and clarithromycin (triple therapy) or amoxicillin alone (dual therapy) for treating H. pylori infection. It has already been approved in Japan for the treatment of gastric and duodenal ulcers, reflux esophagitis, secondary prevention of low-dose aspirin– or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug–induced gastric mucosal damage, and for first and second-line H. pylori eradication therapy.
Study details
The study included 1,046 treatment-naive patients who had dyspepsia, a recent or new diagnosis of a nonbleeding peptic ulcer, a history of a peptic ulcer, or long-term stable use of an NSAID. Patients were randomized to PPI-based triple therapy (lansoprazole, amoxicillin, clarithromycin), vonoprazan triple therapy (plus amoxicillin, clarithromycin), or vonoprazan dual therapy (amoxicillin). The treatment period was 14 days, followed by 13C urea breath test (UBT) 4 weeks after treatment.
The researchers conducted several analyses, including: Modified intention-to-treat analyses, which included all enrollees; per protocol analyses, which included patients who took at least 75% of each study medication and underwent 13C UBT in the expected time frame; and a safety population of all patients who took at least one study drug.
Among patients with H. pylori strains that were not resistant to clarithromycin, the PPI-based triple-therapy group had an eradication rate of 78.8%, compared with 84.7% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (P < .0001), and 78.5% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (P = .0037). In the per protocol analysis, PPI-based triple therapy eradicated H. pylori 82.1% of the time, compared with 90.4% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (P < .0001) and 81.2% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (P = .0077). Both vonoprazan treatment groups were noninferior to PPI-based triple therapy.
A prespecified exploratory analysis found that vonoprazan triple therapy outperformed PPI-based triple therapy in the modified intention-to-treat population (P = .0408) and the per protocol population (P = .0059).
Among patients with clarithromycin-resistant strains of H. pylori, in the modified intention-to-treat population, 31.9% achieved eradication with PPI triple therapy, compared with 65.8% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group, and 69.6% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group. In the per protocol population, the numbers were 29.0% versus 67.2% and 79.5%, respectively (P < .0001 for both versus PPI triple therapy).
Among all patients, in the modified intention-to-treat population, 68.5% achieved eradication with PPI triple therapy, 80.8% with vonoprazan triple therapy (P =. 0001), and 77.2% with vonoprazan dual therapy (P = .0063)*. In the per protocol population, the numbers were 70.0%, 85.7% (P < .0001), and 81.1% (P = .0013), respectively.
Safety outcomes were similar among the three groups, with treatment-emergent adverse events occurring in 34.5% of the PPI triple-therapy group (1.2% discontinued), 34.1% of the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (2.3% discontinued), and 29.9% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (0.9% discontinued).
Fighting against resistance
The efficacy of PPI-based clarithromycin-based triple therapy has fallen below 80% in the United States and Europe over the past few decades, largely because of antibiotic resistance, said William Chey, MD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology. Dr. Chey is a professor of medicine and director of the GI physiology laboratory at Michigan Medicine.
Vonoprazan is more stable in acid than are PPIs, and produces greater and more durable acid reduction, according to Dr. Chey. That’s important for two reasons: One is that some antibiotics are acid-labile, and so may have their efficacy directly impacted in a more acidic environment. The other factor is that most antibiotics work better on bacteria that are actively replicating, and H. pylori reproduces better in a more neutral environment. “So, you increase the replication, you increase the bioavailability of the antibiotics. And therefore, hopefully, that underlies why we see it working better in the patients with [antibiotic] resistance,” Dr. Chey said in an interview.
It remains to be seen whether or not the drug will receive FDA approval, but he pointed to other regimens like bismuth quadruple therapy and rifabutin-based triple therapy that are already available. “If I had the choice, I would never use a PPI-based triple therapy again. People should not be doing that,” said Dr. Chey.
“More successful H. pylori eradication regimens are certainly needed, and these results are particularly relevant and interesting given the increasing failure of initial treatment regimens,” said Kimberly Harer, MD, who moderated the session. She noted that the secondary analysis of patients with clarithromycin-resistant infections was particularly relevant. “The superiority analysis indicating vonoprazan triple therapy resulted in increased H. pylori eradication compared to lanzoprazole triple therapy was especially interesting,” said Dr. Harer, who is a clinical lecturer at University of Michigan Health, Ann Arbor.
One downside to the study is that it didn’t compare vonoprazan combinations to quadruple therapy of a PPI, bismuth, tetracycline, and a nitroimidazole, said Joseph Jennings, MD, who was asked to comment on the study. Other treatment approaches include sequential antibiotics and other combinations. Dr. Jennings also highlighted the findings that the vonoprazan regimens were superior against clarithromycin-resistant strains. “The more different regimens we can add to the armamentarium, the better chance we have because the resistant patterns fluctuate all throughout the world,” said Dr. Jennings, who is an assistant professor of medicine at Georgetown University and director of the center for GI bleeding at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, both in Washington.
He also pointed out that physicians can face a conundrum when patients fail multiple lines of therapy and have testing done that shows high levels of resistance. Some have allergies that prevent them from turning to other antibiotics. “That’s a market where lots of doctors struggle. Something like this would be a nice add-on,” said Dr. Jennings.
The study was funded by Phathom Pharmaceuticals.** Dr. Chey has consulted and/or received research support from Abbvie, Alfasigma, Allakos, Alnylam, Bayer, Bioamerica, Cosmo, Intrinsic Medicine, Ironwood, Modify Health, My GI Health, My Nutrition Health, Nestle, Phathom Pharmaceuticals, QOL Medical, Redhill, Salix/Valeant, Takeda, Urovant, and Vibrant. Dr. Harer and Dr. Jennings have no relevant financial disclosures.
*Correction, 10/29/21: An earlier version of this article misstated the percentage of patients in the modified intention-to-treat population who achieved eradication with vonoprazan triple therapy.
**Correction, 10/29/21: An earlier version of this article misstated the name of Phathom Pharmaceuticals.
LAS VEGAS – In the treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection, combination therapies using the oral potassium-competitive acid blocker vonoprazan were superior to standard proton pump inhibitor (PPI)–based triple therapy, producing higher eradication rates, according to combined data from a U.S. and a European phase 3 randomized, controlled trial.
Vonoprazan has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration for approval with a Fast Track designation in combination with amoxicillin and clarithromycin (triple therapy) or amoxicillin alone (dual therapy) for treating H. pylori infection. It has already been approved in Japan for the treatment of gastric and duodenal ulcers, reflux esophagitis, secondary prevention of low-dose aspirin– or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug–induced gastric mucosal damage, and for first and second-line H. pylori eradication therapy.
Study details
The study included 1,046 treatment-naive patients who had dyspepsia, a recent or new diagnosis of a nonbleeding peptic ulcer, a history of a peptic ulcer, or long-term stable use of an NSAID. Patients were randomized to PPI-based triple therapy (lansoprazole, amoxicillin, clarithromycin), vonoprazan triple therapy (plus amoxicillin, clarithromycin), or vonoprazan dual therapy (amoxicillin). The treatment period was 14 days, followed by 13C urea breath test (UBT) 4 weeks after treatment.
The researchers conducted several analyses, including: Modified intention-to-treat analyses, which included all enrollees; per protocol analyses, which included patients who took at least 75% of each study medication and underwent 13C UBT in the expected time frame; and a safety population of all patients who took at least one study drug.
Among patients with H. pylori strains that were not resistant to clarithromycin, the PPI-based triple-therapy group had an eradication rate of 78.8%, compared with 84.7% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (P < .0001), and 78.5% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (P = .0037). In the per protocol analysis, PPI-based triple therapy eradicated H. pylori 82.1% of the time, compared with 90.4% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (P < .0001) and 81.2% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (P = .0077). Both vonoprazan treatment groups were noninferior to PPI-based triple therapy.
A prespecified exploratory analysis found that vonoprazan triple therapy outperformed PPI-based triple therapy in the modified intention-to-treat population (P = .0408) and the per protocol population (P = .0059).
Among patients with clarithromycin-resistant strains of H. pylori, in the modified intention-to-treat population, 31.9% achieved eradication with PPI triple therapy, compared with 65.8% in the vonoprazan triple-therapy group, and 69.6% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group. In the per protocol population, the numbers were 29.0% versus 67.2% and 79.5%, respectively (P < .0001 for both versus PPI triple therapy).
Among all patients, in the modified intention-to-treat population, 68.5% achieved eradication with PPI triple therapy, 80.8% with vonoprazan triple therapy (P =. 0001), and 77.2% with vonoprazan dual therapy (P = .0063)*. In the per protocol population, the numbers were 70.0%, 85.7% (P < .0001), and 81.1% (P = .0013), respectively.
Safety outcomes were similar among the three groups, with treatment-emergent adverse events occurring in 34.5% of the PPI triple-therapy group (1.2% discontinued), 34.1% of the vonoprazan triple-therapy group (2.3% discontinued), and 29.9% in the vonoprazan dual-therapy group (0.9% discontinued).
Fighting against resistance
The efficacy of PPI-based clarithromycin-based triple therapy has fallen below 80% in the United States and Europe over the past few decades, largely because of antibiotic resistance, said William Chey, MD, during a presentation of the results at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology. Dr. Chey is a professor of medicine and director of the GI physiology laboratory at Michigan Medicine.
Vonoprazan is more stable in acid than are PPIs, and produces greater and more durable acid reduction, according to Dr. Chey. That’s important for two reasons: One is that some antibiotics are acid-labile, and so may have their efficacy directly impacted in a more acidic environment. The other factor is that most antibiotics work better on bacteria that are actively replicating, and H. pylori reproduces better in a more neutral environment. “So, you increase the replication, you increase the bioavailability of the antibiotics. And therefore, hopefully, that underlies why we see it working better in the patients with [antibiotic] resistance,” Dr. Chey said in an interview.
It remains to be seen whether or not the drug will receive FDA approval, but he pointed to other regimens like bismuth quadruple therapy and rifabutin-based triple therapy that are already available. “If I had the choice, I would never use a PPI-based triple therapy again. People should not be doing that,” said Dr. Chey.
“More successful H. pylori eradication regimens are certainly needed, and these results are particularly relevant and interesting given the increasing failure of initial treatment regimens,” said Kimberly Harer, MD, who moderated the session. She noted that the secondary analysis of patients with clarithromycin-resistant infections was particularly relevant. “The superiority analysis indicating vonoprazan triple therapy resulted in increased H. pylori eradication compared to lanzoprazole triple therapy was especially interesting,” said Dr. Harer, who is a clinical lecturer at University of Michigan Health, Ann Arbor.
One downside to the study is that it didn’t compare vonoprazan combinations to quadruple therapy of a PPI, bismuth, tetracycline, and a nitroimidazole, said Joseph Jennings, MD, who was asked to comment on the study. Other treatment approaches include sequential antibiotics and other combinations. Dr. Jennings also highlighted the findings that the vonoprazan regimens were superior against clarithromycin-resistant strains. “The more different regimens we can add to the armamentarium, the better chance we have because the resistant patterns fluctuate all throughout the world,” said Dr. Jennings, who is an assistant professor of medicine at Georgetown University and director of the center for GI bleeding at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, both in Washington.
He also pointed out that physicians can face a conundrum when patients fail multiple lines of therapy and have testing done that shows high levels of resistance. Some have allergies that prevent them from turning to other antibiotics. “That’s a market where lots of doctors struggle. Something like this would be a nice add-on,” said Dr. Jennings.
The study was funded by Phathom Pharmaceuticals.** Dr. Chey has consulted and/or received research support from Abbvie, Alfasigma, Allakos, Alnylam, Bayer, Bioamerica, Cosmo, Intrinsic Medicine, Ironwood, Modify Health, My GI Health, My Nutrition Health, Nestle, Phathom Pharmaceuticals, QOL Medical, Redhill, Salix/Valeant, Takeda, Urovant, and Vibrant. Dr. Harer and Dr. Jennings have no relevant financial disclosures.
*Correction, 10/29/21: An earlier version of this article misstated the percentage of patients in the modified intention-to-treat population who achieved eradication with vonoprazan triple therapy.
**Correction, 10/29/21: An earlier version of this article misstated the name of Phathom Pharmaceuticals.
AT ACG 2021
After POEM, FLIP matches HRM for measuring patient response
LAS VEGAS – Functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) was equivalent to high-resolution manometry (HRM) in predicting clinical response by Eckardt score 6 months or more after per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) for achalasia or esophagogastric junction (EGJ) outlet obstruction (EGJOO).
Measures for clinical response following lower esophageal sphincter myotomy procedures include Eckardt Score, timed barium esophagram, HRM, and FLIP. However, since FLIP is a relatively new technique, there are few clinical data comparing its efficacy versus HRM in patients who have a positive response to POEM measured by the Eckardt score, according to John DeWitt, MD, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
FLIP can be performed during a follow-up endoscopy while a patient is sedated, while HRM requires the patient to be awake. Some patients find the procedure intolerable, and Dr. DeWitt estimates that 10%-20% of patients don’t return for follow-up assessments because of the discomfort.
“[FLIP] is a relatively new technology, the role of which is still being discovered. We have a lot more information on the diagnosis side of things. The role in follow-up, particularly after myotomy, is really not defined well. This is the first study to my knowledge that has evaluated manometry and FLIP head-to-head to compare patient-reported outcomes,” said Dr. DeWitt in an interview. He is a professor of medicine and the director of endoscopic ultrasound at Indiana University Medical Center, in Indianapolis.
Going head-to-head
The researchers conducted a retrospective, single-center study of 265 consecutive patients who underwent POEM for achalasia or EGJOO from 2016 through 2020. A clinical response was defined as an Eckardt score ≤3, EGJ distensibility index (EGJ-DI) higher than 2.8 mm2/mm Hg, maximum integrated relaxation pressure (IRP) <15 mm Hg, or a maximum EGJ diameter greater than 14 mm at any balloon distension.
In all, 126 patients returned for follow-up and completed an upper endoscopy with FLIP, HRM, and Eckardt scores within a 6-12 month period after the POEM procedure.
With respect to HRM, an IRP measurement <15 mm Hg predicted post-POEM Eckardt score with a sensitivity of 86.7% (95% confidence interval, 79.3-92.2) and a specificity of 33.3% (95% CI, 4.3-77.7), with an area under the curve of 0.60 (95% CI, 0.39-0.81). A maximum EJG diameter ≥ 14 mm had a sensitivity of 77.5% (95% CI, 69.0-84.6) and a specificity of 33.3% (95% CI, 4.3-77.7), with an AUC of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.34-0.76).
The performance was similar with FLIP: EGJ-DI > 2.8 mm2/mm Hg at any balloon setting had a sensitivity of 95.0% (95% CI, 89.4-98.1) and a specificity% of 0.0, and an AUC of 0.53 (95% CI, 0.51-0.55). A similar measurement at 40 mL or 50 mL distension had a sensitivity of 93.3% (95% CI, 87.3-97.1) and a specificity of 16.7% (95% CI, 0.4-64.1), with an AUC of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.39-0.72). Receiver operator characteristic analysis showed no significant difference between ability of FLIP and HRM to predict a normal Eckardt score.
If the study is repeated in other patient populations, Dr. DeWitt hopes that it could eliminate manometry altogether in a large majority of patients. “That would be potentially a game changer for bringing patients back to see how well they’re doing,” said Dr. DeWitt.
Not all patients who undergo POEM would be good candidates for FLIP, said Dr. DeWitt. The study was limited to patients with hypertension in the lower esophageal sphincter. Other disorders such as diffuse esophageal spasm, jackhammer esophagus, and type III achalasia would not likely be candidates for FLIP. “Those patients are going to probably still need manometry because if the esophageal body abnormalities are still present, then repeat testing might need to be performed,” said Dr. DeWitt. Still, he estimated about 80% of patients could be eligible for FLIP instead.
Impact on patients
“I think it’s interesting new data,” said Patrick Young, MD, who comoderated the session where the research was presented. He noted that the treatment of achalasia is evolving away from surgery, and the techniques to measure response are evolving along with it. “As we progress in that technology and using that procedure, we need to understand better how to follow those people up. I think adding this new device may help us to understand who’s going to respond well, and who’s not going to respond well. This is an early investigation, so I think we’ll need to do trials, but I think this is a good first step,” said Dr. Young, who is a professor of medicine at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md.
Comoderator Mohammad Yaghoobi, MD, also praised the study, but noted that the cost of FLIP could be a concern. “We want to have a reasonable ratio of the cost versus the effectiveness,” said Dr. Yaghoobi, who is an associate professor of medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.
Dr. DeWitt, Dr. Young, and Dr. Yaghoobi had no relevant disclosures.
LAS VEGAS – Functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) was equivalent to high-resolution manometry (HRM) in predicting clinical response by Eckardt score 6 months or more after per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) for achalasia or esophagogastric junction (EGJ) outlet obstruction (EGJOO).
Measures for clinical response following lower esophageal sphincter myotomy procedures include Eckardt Score, timed barium esophagram, HRM, and FLIP. However, since FLIP is a relatively new technique, there are few clinical data comparing its efficacy versus HRM in patients who have a positive response to POEM measured by the Eckardt score, according to John DeWitt, MD, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
FLIP can be performed during a follow-up endoscopy while a patient is sedated, while HRM requires the patient to be awake. Some patients find the procedure intolerable, and Dr. DeWitt estimates that 10%-20% of patients don’t return for follow-up assessments because of the discomfort.
“[FLIP] is a relatively new technology, the role of which is still being discovered. We have a lot more information on the diagnosis side of things. The role in follow-up, particularly after myotomy, is really not defined well. This is the first study to my knowledge that has evaluated manometry and FLIP head-to-head to compare patient-reported outcomes,” said Dr. DeWitt in an interview. He is a professor of medicine and the director of endoscopic ultrasound at Indiana University Medical Center, in Indianapolis.
Going head-to-head
The researchers conducted a retrospective, single-center study of 265 consecutive patients who underwent POEM for achalasia or EGJOO from 2016 through 2020. A clinical response was defined as an Eckardt score ≤3, EGJ distensibility index (EGJ-DI) higher than 2.8 mm2/mm Hg, maximum integrated relaxation pressure (IRP) <15 mm Hg, or a maximum EGJ diameter greater than 14 mm at any balloon distension.
In all, 126 patients returned for follow-up and completed an upper endoscopy with FLIP, HRM, and Eckardt scores within a 6-12 month period after the POEM procedure.
With respect to HRM, an IRP measurement <15 mm Hg predicted post-POEM Eckardt score with a sensitivity of 86.7% (95% confidence interval, 79.3-92.2) and a specificity of 33.3% (95% CI, 4.3-77.7), with an area under the curve of 0.60 (95% CI, 0.39-0.81). A maximum EJG diameter ≥ 14 mm had a sensitivity of 77.5% (95% CI, 69.0-84.6) and a specificity of 33.3% (95% CI, 4.3-77.7), with an AUC of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.34-0.76).
The performance was similar with FLIP: EGJ-DI > 2.8 mm2/mm Hg at any balloon setting had a sensitivity of 95.0% (95% CI, 89.4-98.1) and a specificity% of 0.0, and an AUC of 0.53 (95% CI, 0.51-0.55). A similar measurement at 40 mL or 50 mL distension had a sensitivity of 93.3% (95% CI, 87.3-97.1) and a specificity of 16.7% (95% CI, 0.4-64.1), with an AUC of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.39-0.72). Receiver operator characteristic analysis showed no significant difference between ability of FLIP and HRM to predict a normal Eckardt score.
If the study is repeated in other patient populations, Dr. DeWitt hopes that it could eliminate manometry altogether in a large majority of patients. “That would be potentially a game changer for bringing patients back to see how well they’re doing,” said Dr. DeWitt.
Not all patients who undergo POEM would be good candidates for FLIP, said Dr. DeWitt. The study was limited to patients with hypertension in the lower esophageal sphincter. Other disorders such as diffuse esophageal spasm, jackhammer esophagus, and type III achalasia would not likely be candidates for FLIP. “Those patients are going to probably still need manometry because if the esophageal body abnormalities are still present, then repeat testing might need to be performed,” said Dr. DeWitt. Still, he estimated about 80% of patients could be eligible for FLIP instead.
Impact on patients
“I think it’s interesting new data,” said Patrick Young, MD, who comoderated the session where the research was presented. He noted that the treatment of achalasia is evolving away from surgery, and the techniques to measure response are evolving along with it. “As we progress in that technology and using that procedure, we need to understand better how to follow those people up. I think adding this new device may help us to understand who’s going to respond well, and who’s not going to respond well. This is an early investigation, so I think we’ll need to do trials, but I think this is a good first step,” said Dr. Young, who is a professor of medicine at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md.
Comoderator Mohammad Yaghoobi, MD, also praised the study, but noted that the cost of FLIP could be a concern. “We want to have a reasonable ratio of the cost versus the effectiveness,” said Dr. Yaghoobi, who is an associate professor of medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.
Dr. DeWitt, Dr. Young, and Dr. Yaghoobi had no relevant disclosures.
LAS VEGAS – Functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) was equivalent to high-resolution manometry (HRM) in predicting clinical response by Eckardt score 6 months or more after per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) for achalasia or esophagogastric junction (EGJ) outlet obstruction (EGJOO).
Measures for clinical response following lower esophageal sphincter myotomy procedures include Eckardt Score, timed barium esophagram, HRM, and FLIP. However, since FLIP is a relatively new technique, there are few clinical data comparing its efficacy versus HRM in patients who have a positive response to POEM measured by the Eckardt score, according to John DeWitt, MD, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
FLIP can be performed during a follow-up endoscopy while a patient is sedated, while HRM requires the patient to be awake. Some patients find the procedure intolerable, and Dr. DeWitt estimates that 10%-20% of patients don’t return for follow-up assessments because of the discomfort.
“[FLIP] is a relatively new technology, the role of which is still being discovered. We have a lot more information on the diagnosis side of things. The role in follow-up, particularly after myotomy, is really not defined well. This is the first study to my knowledge that has evaluated manometry and FLIP head-to-head to compare patient-reported outcomes,” said Dr. DeWitt in an interview. He is a professor of medicine and the director of endoscopic ultrasound at Indiana University Medical Center, in Indianapolis.
Going head-to-head
The researchers conducted a retrospective, single-center study of 265 consecutive patients who underwent POEM for achalasia or EGJOO from 2016 through 2020. A clinical response was defined as an Eckardt score ≤3, EGJ distensibility index (EGJ-DI) higher than 2.8 mm2/mm Hg, maximum integrated relaxation pressure (IRP) <15 mm Hg, or a maximum EGJ diameter greater than 14 mm at any balloon distension.
In all, 126 patients returned for follow-up and completed an upper endoscopy with FLIP, HRM, and Eckardt scores within a 6-12 month period after the POEM procedure.
With respect to HRM, an IRP measurement <15 mm Hg predicted post-POEM Eckardt score with a sensitivity of 86.7% (95% confidence interval, 79.3-92.2) and a specificity of 33.3% (95% CI, 4.3-77.7), with an area under the curve of 0.60 (95% CI, 0.39-0.81). A maximum EJG diameter ≥ 14 mm had a sensitivity of 77.5% (95% CI, 69.0-84.6) and a specificity of 33.3% (95% CI, 4.3-77.7), with an AUC of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.34-0.76).
The performance was similar with FLIP: EGJ-DI > 2.8 mm2/mm Hg at any balloon setting had a sensitivity of 95.0% (95% CI, 89.4-98.1) and a specificity% of 0.0, and an AUC of 0.53 (95% CI, 0.51-0.55). A similar measurement at 40 mL or 50 mL distension had a sensitivity of 93.3% (95% CI, 87.3-97.1) and a specificity of 16.7% (95% CI, 0.4-64.1), with an AUC of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.39-0.72). Receiver operator characteristic analysis showed no significant difference between ability of FLIP and HRM to predict a normal Eckardt score.
If the study is repeated in other patient populations, Dr. DeWitt hopes that it could eliminate manometry altogether in a large majority of patients. “That would be potentially a game changer for bringing patients back to see how well they’re doing,” said Dr. DeWitt.
Not all patients who undergo POEM would be good candidates for FLIP, said Dr. DeWitt. The study was limited to patients with hypertension in the lower esophageal sphincter. Other disorders such as diffuse esophageal spasm, jackhammer esophagus, and type III achalasia would not likely be candidates for FLIP. “Those patients are going to probably still need manometry because if the esophageal body abnormalities are still present, then repeat testing might need to be performed,” said Dr. DeWitt. Still, he estimated about 80% of patients could be eligible for FLIP instead.
Impact on patients
“I think it’s interesting new data,” said Patrick Young, MD, who comoderated the session where the research was presented. He noted that the treatment of achalasia is evolving away from surgery, and the techniques to measure response are evolving along with it. “As we progress in that technology and using that procedure, we need to understand better how to follow those people up. I think adding this new device may help us to understand who’s going to respond well, and who’s not going to respond well. This is an early investigation, so I think we’ll need to do trials, but I think this is a good first step,” said Dr. Young, who is a professor of medicine at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md.
Comoderator Mohammad Yaghoobi, MD, also praised the study, but noted that the cost of FLIP could be a concern. “We want to have a reasonable ratio of the cost versus the effectiveness,” said Dr. Yaghoobi, who is an associate professor of medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.
Dr. DeWitt, Dr. Young, and Dr. Yaghoobi had no relevant disclosures.
AT ACG 2021
Dupilumab shows long-term efficacy in EoE
LAS VEGAS –Data from the 28-week extension of the Liberty EoE TREET phase 3 clinical trial showed that the anti–interleukin-4/IL-13 antibody dupilumab led to long-term improvement in eosinophil count, histology, and patient-reported symptoms of eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) out to 28 weeks. Dupilumab is Food and Drug Administration approved for the treatment of atopic dermatitis, asthma, and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis.
Many patients don’t respond to the standard therapies of proton pump inhibitors, steroids, or diet. Some evidence suggests that EoE might be driven by type 2 inflammation, and dupilumab’s effect on the shared receptor of IL-4 and IL-13 directly counters that pathway.
“The current treatments are [proton pump inhibitors], steroids, or diet – a good proportion of patients don’t respond to them. And they’re also not targeted,” Evan Dellon, MD, professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview. Dr. Dellon presented the research at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
“The bottom line is that people who responded up front to dupilumab maintain that response to a year, and the people on placebo gained a similar response as the people who were treated. It looked good. It was histologic, symptomatic, and endoscopic outcomes,” said Dr. Dellon.
Many of the patients in the new study were steroid refractory, making it a difficult population to treat, according to Dr. Dellon. “You can’t compare to the steroid-treated patients, but the 6-month data showed about a 60% response rate histologically, which is right up there with where steroids and diet are for easier to treat patients. So the fact that it’s a harder to treat cohort is pretty impressive from that standpoint,” said Dr. Dellon.
Data from the first 24 weeks was previously reported at UEG Week 2020 and showed that dupilumab outperformed placebo in EoE patients aged 12 years and older, with dupilumab producing better outcomes in peak esophageal intraepithelial eosinophil count and change in Dysphagia Symptom Questionnaire (DSQ) Score at 24 weeks.
At ACG 2021, Dr. Dellon reported on 52-week results, where all patients from both treated and placebo groups received dupilumab after the initial 24-week phase. Dupilumab reduced dysphagia symptoms as measured by the absolute change in DSQ score at 24 weeks (–21.9 vs. –9.6; P < .001). At 52 weeks, the dupilumab group showed a change of –23.4 from the start of the study, and the placebo-to-dupilumab group had a DSQ score change of –21.7. Dupilumab also led to a greater percentage reduction in DSQ score by 24 weeks (69.2% versus 31.7%; P < .001); at 52 weeks, the dupilumab group had a 75.9% reduction and the placebo-to-dupilumab group had a 65.9% reduction (no significant difference).
The dupilumab group had a greater proportion of patients who achieved peak esophageal eosinophil count of 6 eosinophils or less per high power field at 24 weeks (59.5% vs. 5.1%); at 52 weeks, 55.9% had achieved this measure, versus 60.0% of the placebo-to-dupilumab group. At 24 weeks, the dupilumab group had a 71.2% reduction in peak eosinophil count from baseline versus –3.0% in placebo (P < .001). At week 52, the reductions were 88.6% and 83.8%, respectively.
Histology features were improved with dupilumab. At week 24, the absolute change in histology scoring system mean grade score (histologic severity) from initial baseline was greater in the dupilumab group (least squares mean, –0.761 vs. –0.001; P < .001). The improvement continued at week 52 (LS mean, –0.87) and occurred in the placebo-to-dupilumab group (LS mean, –0.87). The dupilumab group had a greater absolute change in mean stage score at 24 weeks (histologic extent, LS mean, –0.753 vs. –0.012; P < .001) and 52 weeks (LS mean, –0.89), while the placebo-to-dupilumab group achieved a similar change at 52 weeks (LS mean, –0.87).
Endoscopic features improved in the dupilumab group as measured by endoscopic reference score at 24 weeks (LS mean, –3.2 versus –0.3; P <.001) and at 52 weeks (LS mean, –4.1). The placebo-to-dupilumab group had a similar outcome at 52 weeks (LS mean, –3.9).
Dupilumab was well tolerated, with the only significant difference in treatment-emergent adverse events being injection-site reactions and injection-site erythema.
“I thought the data was really impressive and compelling,” said Amy Oxentenko, MD, chair of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, who comoderated the session. “It’d be nice to have something like this that is a targeted therapy that clearly shows improvement in not only some of the symptoms and histology, but also having an impact possibly on that fibrotic piece, which I think is really the area of morbidity in these patients long term.”
If approved, dupilumab could improve compliance among patients, who sometimes struggle with taking topical steroids properly, said comoderator David Hass, MD, who is an associate clinical professor at Yale University, New Haven, Conn. He also agreed that the potential for remodeling would be a significant benefit over steroids.
One concern with dupilumab would be any potential for immune suppression. “It’s always something to think about,” Dr. Hass said.
LIBERTY EoE TREET was funded by Sanofi and Regeneron. Dr. Dellon has consulted and received research support from numerous pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Oxentenko and Dr. Hass have no relevant financial disclosures.
This article was updated Nov. 4, 2021.
LAS VEGAS –Data from the 28-week extension of the Liberty EoE TREET phase 3 clinical trial showed that the anti–interleukin-4/IL-13 antibody dupilumab led to long-term improvement in eosinophil count, histology, and patient-reported symptoms of eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) out to 28 weeks. Dupilumab is Food and Drug Administration approved for the treatment of atopic dermatitis, asthma, and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis.
Many patients don’t respond to the standard therapies of proton pump inhibitors, steroids, or diet. Some evidence suggests that EoE might be driven by type 2 inflammation, and dupilumab’s effect on the shared receptor of IL-4 and IL-13 directly counters that pathway.
“The current treatments are [proton pump inhibitors], steroids, or diet – a good proportion of patients don’t respond to them. And they’re also not targeted,” Evan Dellon, MD, professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview. Dr. Dellon presented the research at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
“The bottom line is that people who responded up front to dupilumab maintain that response to a year, and the people on placebo gained a similar response as the people who were treated. It looked good. It was histologic, symptomatic, and endoscopic outcomes,” said Dr. Dellon.
Many of the patients in the new study were steroid refractory, making it a difficult population to treat, according to Dr. Dellon. “You can’t compare to the steroid-treated patients, but the 6-month data showed about a 60% response rate histologically, which is right up there with where steroids and diet are for easier to treat patients. So the fact that it’s a harder to treat cohort is pretty impressive from that standpoint,” said Dr. Dellon.
Data from the first 24 weeks was previously reported at UEG Week 2020 and showed that dupilumab outperformed placebo in EoE patients aged 12 years and older, with dupilumab producing better outcomes in peak esophageal intraepithelial eosinophil count and change in Dysphagia Symptom Questionnaire (DSQ) Score at 24 weeks.
At ACG 2021, Dr. Dellon reported on 52-week results, where all patients from both treated and placebo groups received dupilumab after the initial 24-week phase. Dupilumab reduced dysphagia symptoms as measured by the absolute change in DSQ score at 24 weeks (–21.9 vs. –9.6; P < .001). At 52 weeks, the dupilumab group showed a change of –23.4 from the start of the study, and the placebo-to-dupilumab group had a DSQ score change of –21.7. Dupilumab also led to a greater percentage reduction in DSQ score by 24 weeks (69.2% versus 31.7%; P < .001); at 52 weeks, the dupilumab group had a 75.9% reduction and the placebo-to-dupilumab group had a 65.9% reduction (no significant difference).
The dupilumab group had a greater proportion of patients who achieved peak esophageal eosinophil count of 6 eosinophils or less per high power field at 24 weeks (59.5% vs. 5.1%); at 52 weeks, 55.9% had achieved this measure, versus 60.0% of the placebo-to-dupilumab group. At 24 weeks, the dupilumab group had a 71.2% reduction in peak eosinophil count from baseline versus –3.0% in placebo (P < .001). At week 52, the reductions were 88.6% and 83.8%, respectively.
Histology features were improved with dupilumab. At week 24, the absolute change in histology scoring system mean grade score (histologic severity) from initial baseline was greater in the dupilumab group (least squares mean, –0.761 vs. –0.001; P < .001). The improvement continued at week 52 (LS mean, –0.87) and occurred in the placebo-to-dupilumab group (LS mean, –0.87). The dupilumab group had a greater absolute change in mean stage score at 24 weeks (histologic extent, LS mean, –0.753 vs. –0.012; P < .001) and 52 weeks (LS mean, –0.89), while the placebo-to-dupilumab group achieved a similar change at 52 weeks (LS mean, –0.87).
Endoscopic features improved in the dupilumab group as measured by endoscopic reference score at 24 weeks (LS mean, –3.2 versus –0.3; P <.001) and at 52 weeks (LS mean, –4.1). The placebo-to-dupilumab group had a similar outcome at 52 weeks (LS mean, –3.9).
Dupilumab was well tolerated, with the only significant difference in treatment-emergent adverse events being injection-site reactions and injection-site erythema.
“I thought the data was really impressive and compelling,” said Amy Oxentenko, MD, chair of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, who comoderated the session. “It’d be nice to have something like this that is a targeted therapy that clearly shows improvement in not only some of the symptoms and histology, but also having an impact possibly on that fibrotic piece, which I think is really the area of morbidity in these patients long term.”
If approved, dupilumab could improve compliance among patients, who sometimes struggle with taking topical steroids properly, said comoderator David Hass, MD, who is an associate clinical professor at Yale University, New Haven, Conn. He also agreed that the potential for remodeling would be a significant benefit over steroids.
One concern with dupilumab would be any potential for immune suppression. “It’s always something to think about,” Dr. Hass said.
LIBERTY EoE TREET was funded by Sanofi and Regeneron. Dr. Dellon has consulted and received research support from numerous pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Oxentenko and Dr. Hass have no relevant financial disclosures.
This article was updated Nov. 4, 2021.
LAS VEGAS –Data from the 28-week extension of the Liberty EoE TREET phase 3 clinical trial showed that the anti–interleukin-4/IL-13 antibody dupilumab led to long-term improvement in eosinophil count, histology, and patient-reported symptoms of eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) out to 28 weeks. Dupilumab is Food and Drug Administration approved for the treatment of atopic dermatitis, asthma, and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis.
Many patients don’t respond to the standard therapies of proton pump inhibitors, steroids, or diet. Some evidence suggests that EoE might be driven by type 2 inflammation, and dupilumab’s effect on the shared receptor of IL-4 and IL-13 directly counters that pathway.
“The current treatments are [proton pump inhibitors], steroids, or diet – a good proportion of patients don’t respond to them. And they’re also not targeted,” Evan Dellon, MD, professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview. Dr. Dellon presented the research at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
“The bottom line is that people who responded up front to dupilumab maintain that response to a year, and the people on placebo gained a similar response as the people who were treated. It looked good. It was histologic, symptomatic, and endoscopic outcomes,” said Dr. Dellon.
Many of the patients in the new study were steroid refractory, making it a difficult population to treat, according to Dr. Dellon. “You can’t compare to the steroid-treated patients, but the 6-month data showed about a 60% response rate histologically, which is right up there with where steroids and diet are for easier to treat patients. So the fact that it’s a harder to treat cohort is pretty impressive from that standpoint,” said Dr. Dellon.
Data from the first 24 weeks was previously reported at UEG Week 2020 and showed that dupilumab outperformed placebo in EoE patients aged 12 years and older, with dupilumab producing better outcomes in peak esophageal intraepithelial eosinophil count and change in Dysphagia Symptom Questionnaire (DSQ) Score at 24 weeks.
At ACG 2021, Dr. Dellon reported on 52-week results, where all patients from both treated and placebo groups received dupilumab after the initial 24-week phase. Dupilumab reduced dysphagia symptoms as measured by the absolute change in DSQ score at 24 weeks (–21.9 vs. –9.6; P < .001). At 52 weeks, the dupilumab group showed a change of –23.4 from the start of the study, and the placebo-to-dupilumab group had a DSQ score change of –21.7. Dupilumab also led to a greater percentage reduction in DSQ score by 24 weeks (69.2% versus 31.7%; P < .001); at 52 weeks, the dupilumab group had a 75.9% reduction and the placebo-to-dupilumab group had a 65.9% reduction (no significant difference).
The dupilumab group had a greater proportion of patients who achieved peak esophageal eosinophil count of 6 eosinophils or less per high power field at 24 weeks (59.5% vs. 5.1%); at 52 weeks, 55.9% had achieved this measure, versus 60.0% of the placebo-to-dupilumab group. At 24 weeks, the dupilumab group had a 71.2% reduction in peak eosinophil count from baseline versus –3.0% in placebo (P < .001). At week 52, the reductions were 88.6% and 83.8%, respectively.
Histology features were improved with dupilumab. At week 24, the absolute change in histology scoring system mean grade score (histologic severity) from initial baseline was greater in the dupilumab group (least squares mean, –0.761 vs. –0.001; P < .001). The improvement continued at week 52 (LS mean, –0.87) and occurred in the placebo-to-dupilumab group (LS mean, –0.87). The dupilumab group had a greater absolute change in mean stage score at 24 weeks (histologic extent, LS mean, –0.753 vs. –0.012; P < .001) and 52 weeks (LS mean, –0.89), while the placebo-to-dupilumab group achieved a similar change at 52 weeks (LS mean, –0.87).
Endoscopic features improved in the dupilumab group as measured by endoscopic reference score at 24 weeks (LS mean, –3.2 versus –0.3; P <.001) and at 52 weeks (LS mean, –4.1). The placebo-to-dupilumab group had a similar outcome at 52 weeks (LS mean, –3.9).
Dupilumab was well tolerated, with the only significant difference in treatment-emergent adverse events being injection-site reactions and injection-site erythema.
“I thought the data was really impressive and compelling,” said Amy Oxentenko, MD, chair of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, who comoderated the session. “It’d be nice to have something like this that is a targeted therapy that clearly shows improvement in not only some of the symptoms and histology, but also having an impact possibly on that fibrotic piece, which I think is really the area of morbidity in these patients long term.”
If approved, dupilumab could improve compliance among patients, who sometimes struggle with taking topical steroids properly, said comoderator David Hass, MD, who is an associate clinical professor at Yale University, New Haven, Conn. He also agreed that the potential for remodeling would be a significant benefit over steroids.
One concern with dupilumab would be any potential for immune suppression. “It’s always something to think about,” Dr. Hass said.
LIBERTY EoE TREET was funded by Sanofi and Regeneron. Dr. Dellon has consulted and received research support from numerous pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Oxentenko and Dr. Hass have no relevant financial disclosures.
This article was updated Nov. 4, 2021.
AT AGC 2021
Stool samples meet gastric biopsies for H. pylori antibiotic resistance testing
Using stool samples to test for Helicobacter pylori antibiotic resistance provides highly similar results to those of gastric biopsy samples, which suggests that stool testing may be a safer, more convenient, and more cost-effective option, according to investigators.
Head-to-head testing for resistance-associated mutations using next-generation sequencing (NGS) showed 92% concordance between the two sample types, with 100% technical success among polymerase chain reaction (PCR)–positive stool samples, lead author Steven Moss, MD, of Brown University, Providence, R.I., and colleagues reported.
“H. pylori eradication rates have declined largely due to rising antimicrobial resistance worldwide,” Dr. Moss said at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology. “There is therefore a need for rapid, accurate, reliable antibiotic resistance testing.”
According to Dr. Moss, molecular resistance testing of gastric biopsies yields similar results to culture-based testing of gastric biopsies, but endoscopic sample collection remains inconvenient and relatively costly, so “it is not commonly performed in many GI practices.
“Whether reliable resistance testing by NGS is possible from stool samples remains unclear,” Dr. Moss said.
To explore this possibility, Dr. Moss and colleagues recruited 262 patients scheduled for upper endoscopy at four sites in the United States. From each patient, two gastric biopsies were taken, and within 2 weeks of the procedure, prior to starting anti–H. pylori therapy, one stool sample was collected.
For gastric biopsy samples, H. pylori positivity was confirmed by PCR, whereas positivity in stool samples was confirmed by both fecal antigen testing and PCR. After confirmation, NGS was conducted, with screening for resistance-associated mutations to six commonly used antibiotics: clarithromycin, levofloxacin, metronidazole, tetracycline, amoxicillin, and rifabutin.
Out of 262 patients, 73 tested positive for H. pylori via stool testing; however, 2 of these patients had inadequate gastric DNA for analysis, leaving 71 patients in the evaluable dataset. Within this group, samples from 50 patients (70.4%) had at least one resistance-association mutation.
Among all 71 individuals, 65 patients (91.5%) had fully concordant results between the two sample types. In four out of the six discordant cases, there was only one difference in antibiotic-associated mutations. Concordance ranged from 89% for metronidazole mutations to 100% for tetracycline, amoxicillin, and rifabutin mutations.
“It is now possible to rapidly obtain susceptibility data without endoscopy,” Dr. Moss concluded. “Using NGS to determine H. pylori antibiotic resistance using stool obviates the cost, inconvenience, and risks of endoscopy resistance profiling.”
Dr. Moss noted that the cost of the stool-based test, through study sponsor American Molecular Laboratories, is about $450, and that the company is “working with various insurance companies to try to get [the test] reimbursed.”
For cases of H. pylori infection without resistance testing results, Dr. Moss recommended first-line treatment with quadruple bismuth–based therapy; however, he noted that “most gastroenterologists, in all kinds of practice, are not measuring their eradication success rate ... so it’s really difficult to know if your best guess is really the appropriate treatment.”
According to Lukasz Kwapisz, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, the concordance results are “encouraging,” and suggest that stool-based testing “could be much easier for the patient and the clinician” to find ways to eradicate H. pylori infection.
Dr. Kwapisz predicted that it will take additional successful studies, as well as real-world data, to convert clinicians to the new approach. He suggested that the transition may be gradual, like the adoption of fecal calprotectin testing.
“I don’t know if it’s one singular defining study that will tell you: ‘Okay, we all have to use this [stool-based resistance testing],’ ” he said. “It kind of happens over time – over a 2- or 3-year stretch, I would think, with positive results.”
The study was supported by American Molecular Labs. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with Takeda, Phathom, and Redhill. Dr. Kwapisz reported no conflicts of interest.
Using stool samples to test for Helicobacter pylori antibiotic resistance provides highly similar results to those of gastric biopsy samples, which suggests that stool testing may be a safer, more convenient, and more cost-effective option, according to investigators.
Head-to-head testing for resistance-associated mutations using next-generation sequencing (NGS) showed 92% concordance between the two sample types, with 100% technical success among polymerase chain reaction (PCR)–positive stool samples, lead author Steven Moss, MD, of Brown University, Providence, R.I., and colleagues reported.
“H. pylori eradication rates have declined largely due to rising antimicrobial resistance worldwide,” Dr. Moss said at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology. “There is therefore a need for rapid, accurate, reliable antibiotic resistance testing.”
According to Dr. Moss, molecular resistance testing of gastric biopsies yields similar results to culture-based testing of gastric biopsies, but endoscopic sample collection remains inconvenient and relatively costly, so “it is not commonly performed in many GI practices.
“Whether reliable resistance testing by NGS is possible from stool samples remains unclear,” Dr. Moss said.
To explore this possibility, Dr. Moss and colleagues recruited 262 patients scheduled for upper endoscopy at four sites in the United States. From each patient, two gastric biopsies were taken, and within 2 weeks of the procedure, prior to starting anti–H. pylori therapy, one stool sample was collected.
For gastric biopsy samples, H. pylori positivity was confirmed by PCR, whereas positivity in stool samples was confirmed by both fecal antigen testing and PCR. After confirmation, NGS was conducted, with screening for resistance-associated mutations to six commonly used antibiotics: clarithromycin, levofloxacin, metronidazole, tetracycline, amoxicillin, and rifabutin.
Out of 262 patients, 73 tested positive for H. pylori via stool testing; however, 2 of these patients had inadequate gastric DNA for analysis, leaving 71 patients in the evaluable dataset. Within this group, samples from 50 patients (70.4%) had at least one resistance-association mutation.
Among all 71 individuals, 65 patients (91.5%) had fully concordant results between the two sample types. In four out of the six discordant cases, there was only one difference in antibiotic-associated mutations. Concordance ranged from 89% for metronidazole mutations to 100% for tetracycline, amoxicillin, and rifabutin mutations.
“It is now possible to rapidly obtain susceptibility data without endoscopy,” Dr. Moss concluded. “Using NGS to determine H. pylori antibiotic resistance using stool obviates the cost, inconvenience, and risks of endoscopy resistance profiling.”
Dr. Moss noted that the cost of the stool-based test, through study sponsor American Molecular Laboratories, is about $450, and that the company is “working with various insurance companies to try to get [the test] reimbursed.”
For cases of H. pylori infection without resistance testing results, Dr. Moss recommended first-line treatment with quadruple bismuth–based therapy; however, he noted that “most gastroenterologists, in all kinds of practice, are not measuring their eradication success rate ... so it’s really difficult to know if your best guess is really the appropriate treatment.”
According to Lukasz Kwapisz, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, the concordance results are “encouraging,” and suggest that stool-based testing “could be much easier for the patient and the clinician” to find ways to eradicate H. pylori infection.
Dr. Kwapisz predicted that it will take additional successful studies, as well as real-world data, to convert clinicians to the new approach. He suggested that the transition may be gradual, like the adoption of fecal calprotectin testing.
“I don’t know if it’s one singular defining study that will tell you: ‘Okay, we all have to use this [stool-based resistance testing],’ ” he said. “It kind of happens over time – over a 2- or 3-year stretch, I would think, with positive results.”
The study was supported by American Molecular Labs. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with Takeda, Phathom, and Redhill. Dr. Kwapisz reported no conflicts of interest.
Using stool samples to test for Helicobacter pylori antibiotic resistance provides highly similar results to those of gastric biopsy samples, which suggests that stool testing may be a safer, more convenient, and more cost-effective option, according to investigators.
Head-to-head testing for resistance-associated mutations using next-generation sequencing (NGS) showed 92% concordance between the two sample types, with 100% technical success among polymerase chain reaction (PCR)–positive stool samples, lead author Steven Moss, MD, of Brown University, Providence, R.I., and colleagues reported.
“H. pylori eradication rates have declined largely due to rising antimicrobial resistance worldwide,” Dr. Moss said at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology. “There is therefore a need for rapid, accurate, reliable antibiotic resistance testing.”
According to Dr. Moss, molecular resistance testing of gastric biopsies yields similar results to culture-based testing of gastric biopsies, but endoscopic sample collection remains inconvenient and relatively costly, so “it is not commonly performed in many GI practices.
“Whether reliable resistance testing by NGS is possible from stool samples remains unclear,” Dr. Moss said.
To explore this possibility, Dr. Moss and colleagues recruited 262 patients scheduled for upper endoscopy at four sites in the United States. From each patient, two gastric biopsies were taken, and within 2 weeks of the procedure, prior to starting anti–H. pylori therapy, one stool sample was collected.
For gastric biopsy samples, H. pylori positivity was confirmed by PCR, whereas positivity in stool samples was confirmed by both fecal antigen testing and PCR. After confirmation, NGS was conducted, with screening for resistance-associated mutations to six commonly used antibiotics: clarithromycin, levofloxacin, metronidazole, tetracycline, amoxicillin, and rifabutin.
Out of 262 patients, 73 tested positive for H. pylori via stool testing; however, 2 of these patients had inadequate gastric DNA for analysis, leaving 71 patients in the evaluable dataset. Within this group, samples from 50 patients (70.4%) had at least one resistance-association mutation.
Among all 71 individuals, 65 patients (91.5%) had fully concordant results between the two sample types. In four out of the six discordant cases, there was only one difference in antibiotic-associated mutations. Concordance ranged from 89% for metronidazole mutations to 100% for tetracycline, amoxicillin, and rifabutin mutations.
“It is now possible to rapidly obtain susceptibility data without endoscopy,” Dr. Moss concluded. “Using NGS to determine H. pylori antibiotic resistance using stool obviates the cost, inconvenience, and risks of endoscopy resistance profiling.”
Dr. Moss noted that the cost of the stool-based test, through study sponsor American Molecular Laboratories, is about $450, and that the company is “working with various insurance companies to try to get [the test] reimbursed.”
For cases of H. pylori infection without resistance testing results, Dr. Moss recommended first-line treatment with quadruple bismuth–based therapy; however, he noted that “most gastroenterologists, in all kinds of practice, are not measuring their eradication success rate ... so it’s really difficult to know if your best guess is really the appropriate treatment.”
According to Lukasz Kwapisz, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, the concordance results are “encouraging,” and suggest that stool-based testing “could be much easier for the patient and the clinician” to find ways to eradicate H. pylori infection.
Dr. Kwapisz predicted that it will take additional successful studies, as well as real-world data, to convert clinicians to the new approach. He suggested that the transition may be gradual, like the adoption of fecal calprotectin testing.
“I don’t know if it’s one singular defining study that will tell you: ‘Okay, we all have to use this [stool-based resistance testing],’ ” he said. “It kind of happens over time – over a 2- or 3-year stretch, I would think, with positive results.”
The study was supported by American Molecular Labs. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with Takeda, Phathom, and Redhill. Dr. Kwapisz reported no conflicts of interest.
FROM ACG 2021
GERD: Composite pH impedance monitoring better identifies treatment escalation need
Combinations of abnormal pH-impedance metrics better predicted nonresponse to proton pump inhibitor therapy, as well as benefit of treatment escalation, than individual metrics in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) on twice-daily PPI.
The researchers found a higher proportion of nonresponders to PPI in a group of patients that had combinations of abnormal reflux burden, characterized as acid exposure time greater than 4%, more than 80 reflux episodes, and/or mean nocturnal baseline impedance (MNBI) less than 1,500 ohms, with 85% of these patients improving following initiation of invasive GERD management such as antireflux surgery or magnetic sphincter augmentation.
Not only does the combination of metrics offer more value in identifying responders to PPI than individual metrics, but the combination also offer greater value in “subsequently predicting response to escalation of antireflux management,” study authors C. Prakash Gyawali, MD, of Washington University, St. Louis, and colleagues wrote in Gastroenterology.
Currently in question is the applicability of thresholds for metrics from pH impedance monitoring for studies performed on PPI. According to Dr. Gyawali and colleagues, thresholds from the Lyon Consensus may be too high and likewise lack optimal sensitivity for detecting refractory acid burden in patients on PPI, while thresholds based on pH-metry alone, as reported in other publications, may also lack specificity.
To determine which metrics from “on PPI” pH impedance studies predict escalation therapy needs, the researchers analyzed deidentified pH impedance studies performed in healthy volunteers (n=66; median age, 37.5 years) and patients with GERD (n = 43; median age, 57.0 years); both groups were on twice-daily PPI. The investigators compared median values for pH impedance metrics between healthy volunteers and patients with proven GERD using validated measures.
Data were included from a total of three groups: tracings from European and North American healthy volunteers who received twice-daily PPI for 5-7 days; tracings from European patients with heartburn-predominant proven GERD with prior abnormal reflux monitoring off PPI who subsequently received twice-daily PPI; and tracings from a cohort of patients with regurgitation-predominant, proven GERD and prior abnormal reflux monitoring off PPI who subsequently received twice-daily PPI.
A improvement in heartburn of at least 50%, as recorded on 4-point Likert-type scales, defined PPI responders and improvements following antireflux surgery in the European comparison group. Additionally, an improvement of at least 50% on the GERD Health-Related Quality of Life scale also characterized PPI responders and improvements following magnetic sphincter augmentation in the North American comparison group.
There was no significant difference between PPI responders and nonresponders in terms of individual conventional and novel reflux metrics. The combinations of metrics associated with abnormal reflux burden and abnormal mucosal integrity (acid exposure time >4%, >80 reflux episodes, and MNBI <1,500 ohms) were observed in 32.6% of patients with heartburn and 40.5% of patients with regurgitation-predominant GERD, but no healthy volunteers. The combinations were also observed in 57.1% and 82.4% of nonresponders, respectively.
The authors defined a borderline category (acid exposure time, >0.5% but <4%; >40 but <80 reflux episodes), which accounted for 32.6% of patients with heartburn-predominant GERD and 50% of those regurgitation-predominant GERD. Nonresponse among these borderline cases was identified in 28.6% and 81%, respectively.
“Performance characteristics of the presence of abnormal reflux burden and/or abnormal mucosal integrity in predicting PPI nonresponse consisted of sensitivity, 0.50; specificity, 0.71; and AUC, 0.59 (P = .15),” the authors explained. “Performance characteristics of abnormal and borderline reflux burden categories together in predicting PPI nonresponse consisted of sensitivity, 0.86; specificity, 0.36; and AUC, 0.62 (P = .07).”
Limitations of this study included its retrospective nature, small sample sizes for the healthy volunteer and GERD populations, and the lack of data on relevant clinical information, including body mass index, dietary patterns, and PPI types and doses. Additionally, the findings may lack generalizability because of the inclusion of only patients with GERD who underwent surgical management.
Despite these limitations, the researchers wrote that the findings and identified “thresholds will be useful in planning prospective outcome studies to conclusively determine when to escalate antireflux therapy when GERD symptoms persist despite bid PPI therapy.”
The study researchers reported conflicts of interest with several pharmaceutical companies. No funding was reported for the study.
The management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is the most common referral for a gastroenterologist; however, metrics to determine dose-escalation for persistent symptoms in patients with proven GERD is an unmet need. The Lyon consensus aimed to standardize abnormal pH parameters but used similar thresholds for off– and on–proton pump inhibitor testing; these thresholds for on-PPI testing are likely too high to detect refractory reflux on PPI therapy. The use of pH-impedance testing is an optimal test for patients with persistent symptoms in the setting of proven GERD to determine escalation of antireflux therapy. In this multicenter, international cohort study, Gyawali and colleagues rigorously challenged the definition of abnormal pH-impedance testing with an evaluation of pH impedance parameters comparing controls (n = 66) versus proven GERD (n = 43) on twice-daily PPI dosing to define pH-impedance parameters.
In the era of easy access and overprescription of PPI countered by the unfounded, but perceived fears of PPI or surgery, testing prior to antireflux escalation is now more easily standardized with this data to help guide our patients. Abnormal pH-impedance parameters also help support of the utility of surgery for the carefully selected patient and these cutoffs highlight success rates for patients with heartburn or regurgitation. Limitations of pH impedance include careful examination of the original tracings and center expertise/availability, but with improved definitions of abnormal thresholds, providers should feel empowered to test prior to escalation. Prospective studies using these cutoffs will enhance and hopefully continue an iterative process to define this plurality approach to reflux metrics.
Rishi D. Naik, MD, MSCI, is an assistant professor in the department of medicine in the section of gastroenterology & hepatology at the Esophageal Center at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn. He has no conflicts.
The management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is the most common referral for a gastroenterologist; however, metrics to determine dose-escalation for persistent symptoms in patients with proven GERD is an unmet need. The Lyon consensus aimed to standardize abnormal pH parameters but used similar thresholds for off– and on–proton pump inhibitor testing; these thresholds for on-PPI testing are likely too high to detect refractory reflux on PPI therapy. The use of pH-impedance testing is an optimal test for patients with persistent symptoms in the setting of proven GERD to determine escalation of antireflux therapy. In this multicenter, international cohort study, Gyawali and colleagues rigorously challenged the definition of abnormal pH-impedance testing with an evaluation of pH impedance parameters comparing controls (n = 66) versus proven GERD (n = 43) on twice-daily PPI dosing to define pH-impedance parameters.
In the era of easy access and overprescription of PPI countered by the unfounded, but perceived fears of PPI or surgery, testing prior to antireflux escalation is now more easily standardized with this data to help guide our patients. Abnormal pH-impedance parameters also help support of the utility of surgery for the carefully selected patient and these cutoffs highlight success rates for patients with heartburn or regurgitation. Limitations of pH impedance include careful examination of the original tracings and center expertise/availability, but with improved definitions of abnormal thresholds, providers should feel empowered to test prior to escalation. Prospective studies using these cutoffs will enhance and hopefully continue an iterative process to define this plurality approach to reflux metrics.
Rishi D. Naik, MD, MSCI, is an assistant professor in the department of medicine in the section of gastroenterology & hepatology at the Esophageal Center at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn. He has no conflicts.
The management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is the most common referral for a gastroenterologist; however, metrics to determine dose-escalation for persistent symptoms in patients with proven GERD is an unmet need. The Lyon consensus aimed to standardize abnormal pH parameters but used similar thresholds for off– and on–proton pump inhibitor testing; these thresholds for on-PPI testing are likely too high to detect refractory reflux on PPI therapy. The use of pH-impedance testing is an optimal test for patients with persistent symptoms in the setting of proven GERD to determine escalation of antireflux therapy. In this multicenter, international cohort study, Gyawali and colleagues rigorously challenged the definition of abnormal pH-impedance testing with an evaluation of pH impedance parameters comparing controls (n = 66) versus proven GERD (n = 43) on twice-daily PPI dosing to define pH-impedance parameters.
In the era of easy access and overprescription of PPI countered by the unfounded, but perceived fears of PPI or surgery, testing prior to antireflux escalation is now more easily standardized with this data to help guide our patients. Abnormal pH-impedance parameters also help support of the utility of surgery for the carefully selected patient and these cutoffs highlight success rates for patients with heartburn or regurgitation. Limitations of pH impedance include careful examination of the original tracings and center expertise/availability, but with improved definitions of abnormal thresholds, providers should feel empowered to test prior to escalation. Prospective studies using these cutoffs will enhance and hopefully continue an iterative process to define this plurality approach to reflux metrics.
Rishi D. Naik, MD, MSCI, is an assistant professor in the department of medicine in the section of gastroenterology & hepatology at the Esophageal Center at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn. He has no conflicts.
Combinations of abnormal pH-impedance metrics better predicted nonresponse to proton pump inhibitor therapy, as well as benefit of treatment escalation, than individual metrics in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) on twice-daily PPI.
The researchers found a higher proportion of nonresponders to PPI in a group of patients that had combinations of abnormal reflux burden, characterized as acid exposure time greater than 4%, more than 80 reflux episodes, and/or mean nocturnal baseline impedance (MNBI) less than 1,500 ohms, with 85% of these patients improving following initiation of invasive GERD management such as antireflux surgery or magnetic sphincter augmentation.
Not only does the combination of metrics offer more value in identifying responders to PPI than individual metrics, but the combination also offer greater value in “subsequently predicting response to escalation of antireflux management,” study authors C. Prakash Gyawali, MD, of Washington University, St. Louis, and colleagues wrote in Gastroenterology.
Currently in question is the applicability of thresholds for metrics from pH impedance monitoring for studies performed on PPI. According to Dr. Gyawali and colleagues, thresholds from the Lyon Consensus may be too high and likewise lack optimal sensitivity for detecting refractory acid burden in patients on PPI, while thresholds based on pH-metry alone, as reported in other publications, may also lack specificity.
To determine which metrics from “on PPI” pH impedance studies predict escalation therapy needs, the researchers analyzed deidentified pH impedance studies performed in healthy volunteers (n=66; median age, 37.5 years) and patients with GERD (n = 43; median age, 57.0 years); both groups were on twice-daily PPI. The investigators compared median values for pH impedance metrics between healthy volunteers and patients with proven GERD using validated measures.
Data were included from a total of three groups: tracings from European and North American healthy volunteers who received twice-daily PPI for 5-7 days; tracings from European patients with heartburn-predominant proven GERD with prior abnormal reflux monitoring off PPI who subsequently received twice-daily PPI; and tracings from a cohort of patients with regurgitation-predominant, proven GERD and prior abnormal reflux monitoring off PPI who subsequently received twice-daily PPI.
A improvement in heartburn of at least 50%, as recorded on 4-point Likert-type scales, defined PPI responders and improvements following antireflux surgery in the European comparison group. Additionally, an improvement of at least 50% on the GERD Health-Related Quality of Life scale also characterized PPI responders and improvements following magnetic sphincter augmentation in the North American comparison group.
There was no significant difference between PPI responders and nonresponders in terms of individual conventional and novel reflux metrics. The combinations of metrics associated with abnormal reflux burden and abnormal mucosal integrity (acid exposure time >4%, >80 reflux episodes, and MNBI <1,500 ohms) were observed in 32.6% of patients with heartburn and 40.5% of patients with regurgitation-predominant GERD, but no healthy volunteers. The combinations were also observed in 57.1% and 82.4% of nonresponders, respectively.
The authors defined a borderline category (acid exposure time, >0.5% but <4%; >40 but <80 reflux episodes), which accounted for 32.6% of patients with heartburn-predominant GERD and 50% of those regurgitation-predominant GERD. Nonresponse among these borderline cases was identified in 28.6% and 81%, respectively.
“Performance characteristics of the presence of abnormal reflux burden and/or abnormal mucosal integrity in predicting PPI nonresponse consisted of sensitivity, 0.50; specificity, 0.71; and AUC, 0.59 (P = .15),” the authors explained. “Performance characteristics of abnormal and borderline reflux burden categories together in predicting PPI nonresponse consisted of sensitivity, 0.86; specificity, 0.36; and AUC, 0.62 (P = .07).”
Limitations of this study included its retrospective nature, small sample sizes for the healthy volunteer and GERD populations, and the lack of data on relevant clinical information, including body mass index, dietary patterns, and PPI types and doses. Additionally, the findings may lack generalizability because of the inclusion of only patients with GERD who underwent surgical management.
Despite these limitations, the researchers wrote that the findings and identified “thresholds will be useful in planning prospective outcome studies to conclusively determine when to escalate antireflux therapy when GERD symptoms persist despite bid PPI therapy.”
The study researchers reported conflicts of interest with several pharmaceutical companies. No funding was reported for the study.
Combinations of abnormal pH-impedance metrics better predicted nonresponse to proton pump inhibitor therapy, as well as benefit of treatment escalation, than individual metrics in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) on twice-daily PPI.
The researchers found a higher proportion of nonresponders to PPI in a group of patients that had combinations of abnormal reflux burden, characterized as acid exposure time greater than 4%, more than 80 reflux episodes, and/or mean nocturnal baseline impedance (MNBI) less than 1,500 ohms, with 85% of these patients improving following initiation of invasive GERD management such as antireflux surgery or magnetic sphincter augmentation.
Not only does the combination of metrics offer more value in identifying responders to PPI than individual metrics, but the combination also offer greater value in “subsequently predicting response to escalation of antireflux management,” study authors C. Prakash Gyawali, MD, of Washington University, St. Louis, and colleagues wrote in Gastroenterology.
Currently in question is the applicability of thresholds for metrics from pH impedance monitoring for studies performed on PPI. According to Dr. Gyawali and colleagues, thresholds from the Lyon Consensus may be too high and likewise lack optimal sensitivity for detecting refractory acid burden in patients on PPI, while thresholds based on pH-metry alone, as reported in other publications, may also lack specificity.
To determine which metrics from “on PPI” pH impedance studies predict escalation therapy needs, the researchers analyzed deidentified pH impedance studies performed in healthy volunteers (n=66; median age, 37.5 years) and patients with GERD (n = 43; median age, 57.0 years); both groups were on twice-daily PPI. The investigators compared median values for pH impedance metrics between healthy volunteers and patients with proven GERD using validated measures.
Data were included from a total of three groups: tracings from European and North American healthy volunteers who received twice-daily PPI for 5-7 days; tracings from European patients with heartburn-predominant proven GERD with prior abnormal reflux monitoring off PPI who subsequently received twice-daily PPI; and tracings from a cohort of patients with regurgitation-predominant, proven GERD and prior abnormal reflux monitoring off PPI who subsequently received twice-daily PPI.
A improvement in heartburn of at least 50%, as recorded on 4-point Likert-type scales, defined PPI responders and improvements following antireflux surgery in the European comparison group. Additionally, an improvement of at least 50% on the GERD Health-Related Quality of Life scale also characterized PPI responders and improvements following magnetic sphincter augmentation in the North American comparison group.
There was no significant difference between PPI responders and nonresponders in terms of individual conventional and novel reflux metrics. The combinations of metrics associated with abnormal reflux burden and abnormal mucosal integrity (acid exposure time >4%, >80 reflux episodes, and MNBI <1,500 ohms) were observed in 32.6% of patients with heartburn and 40.5% of patients with regurgitation-predominant GERD, but no healthy volunteers. The combinations were also observed in 57.1% and 82.4% of nonresponders, respectively.
The authors defined a borderline category (acid exposure time, >0.5% but <4%; >40 but <80 reflux episodes), which accounted for 32.6% of patients with heartburn-predominant GERD and 50% of those regurgitation-predominant GERD. Nonresponse among these borderline cases was identified in 28.6% and 81%, respectively.
“Performance characteristics of the presence of abnormal reflux burden and/or abnormal mucosal integrity in predicting PPI nonresponse consisted of sensitivity, 0.50; specificity, 0.71; and AUC, 0.59 (P = .15),” the authors explained. “Performance characteristics of abnormal and borderline reflux burden categories together in predicting PPI nonresponse consisted of sensitivity, 0.86; specificity, 0.36; and AUC, 0.62 (P = .07).”
Limitations of this study included its retrospective nature, small sample sizes for the healthy volunteer and GERD populations, and the lack of data on relevant clinical information, including body mass index, dietary patterns, and PPI types and doses. Additionally, the findings may lack generalizability because of the inclusion of only patients with GERD who underwent surgical management.
Despite these limitations, the researchers wrote that the findings and identified “thresholds will be useful in planning prospective outcome studies to conclusively determine when to escalate antireflux therapy when GERD symptoms persist despite bid PPI therapy.”
The study researchers reported conflicts of interest with several pharmaceutical companies. No funding was reported for the study.
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY