Improved diagnosis of reflux hypersensitivity.

Neurogastroenterol Motil

Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Upper GI Physiology Unit Royal London Hospital, Wingate Institute of Neurogastroenterology, Blizard Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Reflux hypersensitivity (RH) is a condition where patients have typical reflux symptoms but normal acid exposure in the esophagus, with diagnosis relying on both Symptomatic Index (SI) and Symptom Association Probability (SAP) being positive.* -
  • A study involving 2,659 patients found that a significant portion was diagnosed with RH, with differences noted between those with definite RH (both SI and SAP positive) and those with indefinite RH (one positive), particularly in reflux frequency and response to PPI treatment.* -
  • The results suggest that distinguishing RH from other conditions like functional heartburn (FH) is important, and a stricter definition requiring both SI and SAP positivity could improve diagnostic accuracy for RH.*

Article Abstract

Background: Reflux hypersensitivity (RH) is characterized by normal esophageal exposure to acid and positive correlation of symptoms to reflux episodes. Positivity of Symptomatic Index (SI) and/or Symptom Association Probability (SAP) is used diagnostically, though experts support that concordance of both is needed. We evaluated differences among patients with RH and concordance of SI/SAP or not.

Methods: Patients with typical reflux symptoms without previous GERD diagnosis, submitted simultaneously to Ph-Impedance off PPI and high resolution manometry were included. Self-response to PPI was evaluated. Patients showing SI and/or SAP positivity were considered having RH and further classified to definite RH if both SI/SAP were positive or indefinite if only one positive.

Key Results: Totally 2659 patients (M/F: 35.6%/64.7%, mean age: 45 ± 14) were included. Final diagnosis was; FH: 21.8%, RH: 29.3% (definite: 14.3%/indefinite: 15%), GERD: 36% and inconclusive GERD: 12.9%. Patients with definite RH showed increased total reflux time, total number of reflux episodes and length of hiatus hernia, and also numerically but not statistically significant increased rates of PPI responsiveness versus indefinite RH and decreased mean nocturnal baseline impedance. Moreover, they showed significantly increased rate of PPI response versus patients with functional heartburn (FH).

Conclusion & Inferences: Some PPI responsiveness is frequent among patients with RH as also with FH, and cannot discriminate those entities clinically when diagnosing RH using SI and/or SAP positive criterion. Patients with RH and SI/SAP concordance differ from patients without. Implementation of a strict RH definition (both SI and SAP positive) can better distinguish RH from FH and should be used in the future.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nmo.14680DOI Listing

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