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Published in: Esophagus 1/2022

01-01-2022 | Esophagography | Original Article

Characteristics of patients with esophageal motility disorders on high-resolution manometry and esophagography—a large database analysis in Japan

Authors: Chiaki Sato, Hiroki Sato, Takashi Kamei, Yuto Shimamura, Shinwa Tanaka, Hironari Shiwaku, Junya Shiota, Ryo Ogawa, Hiroshi Yokomichi, Haruhiro Inoue

Published in: Esophagus | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

With the development of high-resolution manometry (HRM) and peroral endoscopy, more patients with esophageal motility disorders (EMDs) including achalasia are diagnosed and treated. The characteristics of Japanese patients with EMDs are unknown and should be elucidated.

Methods

A large-scale database analysis was performed at seven high-volume centers in Japan. EMDs between 2010 and 2019 were analyzed.

Results

A total of 1900 patients were diagnosed with treatment naïve achalasia on esophagography. A long disease history was related to the sigmoid and dilated esophagus, and patients’ symptom severity declined as achalasia progressed to the sigmoid type.
Among 1700 patients received starlet HRM, 1476 (86.8%) completed the examination. Long disease history and sigmoid achalasia were identified as risk factors for the failure of HRM examination. Type I achalasia was the most common type found on starlet HRM, and 45.1% of patients with achalasia had lower esophageal sphincter (LES) pressure within the normal range. Type III had a high age of onset and mild symptom severity, compared to the other two subtypes. Type III achalasia, esophagogastric outflow obstruction (EGJ-OO), jackhammer esophagus (JE), and diffuse esophageal spasm (DES) were relatively rare compared to type I–II achalasia. The clinical characteristics of EGJ-OO, JE, and DES were generally close to those of achalasia.

Conclusion

This first large-scale database analysis indicates that more Japanese patients with achalasia are type I and have a normal range of LES pressure on starlet HRM. Failure of HRM is not rare; therefore, esophagography continuously has a complementary role in achalasia diagnosis.
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Metadata
Title
Characteristics of patients with esophageal motility disorders on high-resolution manometry and esophagography—a large database analysis in Japan
Authors
Chiaki Sato
Hiroki Sato
Takashi Kamei
Yuto Shimamura
Shinwa Tanaka
Hironari Shiwaku
Junya Shiota
Ryo Ogawa
Hiroshi Yokomichi
Haruhiro Inoue
Publication date
01-01-2022
Publisher
Springer Singapore
Published in
Esophagus / Issue 1/2022
Print ISSN: 1612-9059
Electronic ISSN: 1612-9067
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10388-021-00875-5

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