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Published in: Surgical Endoscopy 9/2023

21-06-2023 | Achalasia | 2023 SAGES Oral

Preoperative patient factors and anatomy do not predict who will develop reflux after per oral endoscopic myotomy

Authors: Joshua Lyons, Christina Boutros, Saher-Zahra Khan, Jamie Benson, Daniel A. Hashimoto, Jeffrey Marks

Published in: Surgical Endoscopy | Issue 9/2023

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Abstract

Background

Per oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) has been shown to be an efficacious and safe therapy for the treatment of achalasia. Compared to laparoscopic Heller myotomy however, no antireflux procedure is routinely combined with POEM and therefore the development of symptomatic or silent reflux is of concern. This study was designed to determine if various patient factors and anatomy would predict the development of gastroesophageal reflux disease post-operatively.

Methods

This was a retrospective cohort study of all patients who underwent a POEM at a single institution by a single surgeon over an eight-year period (2014–2022). It has been our practice to obtain a postoperative ambulatory pH test on all patients 6 months after POEM off all acid reducing medications. Patients without a postoperative ambulatory esophageal pH monitoring test were excluded. Age, sex, obesity (BMI > 30), achalasia type, presence of a hiatal hernia, history of prior endoscopic achalasia treatments or myotomy were analyzed using univariate analysis as predictive factors for the development of postoperative GERD (DeMeester score > 14.7 on ambulatory pH monitoring).

Results

There were 179 total patients included in the study with 42 patients (23.5%) having undergone postoperative ambulatory pH testing. The majority of patients (137 or 76.5%) were lost to follow up and did not undergo ambulatory pH testing. Twenty-three out of those 42 patients (55%) had evidence of GERD on ambulatory pH testing. Multiple preoperative patient characteristics including demographics, manometric results, EGD findings, and history of prior achalasia interventions did not correlate with the development of post-operative GERD.

Conclusions

Despite the high rate of reflux after POEM, there does not appear to be any reliable preoperative indicators of which patients have a higher risk of developing post-operative GERD after POEM.
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Metadata
Title
Preoperative patient factors and anatomy do not predict who will develop reflux after per oral endoscopic myotomy
Authors
Joshua Lyons
Christina Boutros
Saher-Zahra Khan
Jamie Benson
Daniel A. Hashimoto
Jeffrey Marks
Publication date
21-06-2023
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Surgical Endoscopy / Issue 9/2023
Print ISSN: 0930-2794
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2218
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-023-10205-8

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