Diagnosis of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease is enhanced by adding oesophageal histology and excluding epigastric pain

Date

2017

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Vakil, N.
Vieth, M.
Wernersson, B.
Wissmar, J.
Dent, J.

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Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 2017; 45(10):1350-1357

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N. Vakil, M. Vieth, B. Wernersson, J. Wissmar, J. Dent

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Abstract

Background: The diagnosis of gastro‐oesophageal reflux disease (GERD) in clinical practice is limited by the sensitivity and specificity of symptoms and diagnostic testing. Aim: To determine if adding histology as a criterion and excluding patients with epigastric pain enhances the diagnosis for GERD. Methods: Patients with frequent upper gastrointestinal symptoms who had not taken a proton pump inhibitor in the previous 2 months and who had evaluable distal oesophageal biopsies were included (Diamond study: NCT00291746). Epithelial hyperplasia was identified when total epithelial thickness was at least 430 μm. Investigation‐based GERD criteria were: presence of erosive oesophagitis, pathological oesophageal acid exposure and/or positive symptom–acid association probability. Symptoms were assessed using the Reflux Disease Questionnaire and a pre‐specified checklist. Results: Overall, 127 (55%) of the 231 included patients met investigation‐based GERD criteria and 195 (84%) met symptom‐based criteria. Epithelial hyperplasia was present in 89 individuals, of whom 61 (69%) met investigation‐based criteria and 83 (93%) met symptom‐based criteria. Adding epithelial hyperplasia as a criterion increased the number of patients diagnosed with GERD on investigation by 28 [12%; number needed to diagnose (NND): 8], to 155 (67%). The proportion of patients with a symptom‐based GERD diagnosis who met investigation‐based criteria including epithelial hyperplasia was significantly greater when concomitant epigastric pain was absent than when it was present (P < 0.05; NND: 8). Conclusions: Histology increases diagnosis of GERD and should be performed when clinical suspicion is high and endoscopy is negative. Excluding patients with epigastric pain enhances sensitivity for the diagnosis of GERD.

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© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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