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Opinion

Medication confirmed as first choice for GERD

YOUR DOSE OF MEDICINE - Charles C. Chante MD -

Antisecretory drug therapy should be the first-line treatment for gastroesophageal reflux disease, with antireflux surgery offered only to those whose symptoms are not controlled by medication or who can’t tolerate the drugs, according to a new management guidelines from the American Gastroenterological Association.

Proton pump inhibitors remain the most effective medical therapy, followed by histamine2-receptor agonists, according to the position paper.

“There is ample evidence that, as a drug class, proton pump inhibitors are more effective in these patients than are histamine receptor blockers” written by a lead author of Northwestern University, Chicago.

The document was based on a technical review. Despite fair evidence that some lifestyle modification can benefit patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), the authors found no strong evidence that such changes should be broadly recommended. Patients with nighttime symptoms may benefit from elevating the head of their bed. Overweight or obese patients should be urged to lose weight, as this may prevent or delay the need for acid suppression.

The authors found strong evidence that antisecretory drugs, specially proton pump inhibitors, improve outcomes and there is fair evidence to support twice-daily dosing for some patients. Expert opinion “is essentially unanimous in recommending twice-daily dosing of PPIs to improve symptom relief in patients with . . . unsatisfactory response to once-daily dosing.” They found no evidence that metoclopramide is useful, and recommend against its use because of its substantial side effect profile.

Strong evidence supports a three-tiered diagnostic algorithm. Patients with suspected GERD syndrome and troublesome dysphagia should undergo endoscopy with biopsy as an initial evaluation. Those with suspected GERD who fail to respond to twice-daily PPIs may benefit from either an endoscopy or manometry. Ambulatory pH testing should be done to substantiate a GERD diagnosis for those who have not responded to empirical therapy and who have had unremarkable endoscopy and manometry.

There is no evidence that endoscopy used as a screening tool for Barrett’s esophagus reduces mortality from esophageal adenocarcinoma in the setting of chronic GERD, the authors said.

They found strong evidence that antisecretory drugs also benefit patients with suspected extraesophageal reflux symptoms (cough, laryngitis and asthma). But there was no evidence to support the drugs’ use for extraesophageal symptoms in the absence of an esophageal GERD diagnosis. “Empirical therapy with twice-daily PPIs for two months remains a pragmatic clinical strategy for subsets of these patients if they have a concomitant esophageal GERD syndrome. Failing such a trial, etiologies other than GERD should be explored”.

There are no firm data suggesting that GERD is always a progressive disease, going from nonerosive to erosive to Barrett’s esophagus, the authors said. Therefore, routine endoscopy to monitor progression is not recommended.

For maintenance therapy, the authors found strong evidence that long-term PPIs are safe and effective and can be titrated downward in many patients. But most patients need daily therapy, as “the likelihood of spontaneous remission of disease is low.”

There was fair evidence supporting long-term maintenance therapy   for   patients   with extra-esophageal reflux symptoms, but only if they have concomitant esophageal GERD syndrome.

The authors found no significant safety issues with long-term use of antisecretory drugs. There is no need for routine bone studies or calcium supplementation, beyond that which would normally be recommended based on individual risk factors.

Surgery may be considered for those who can’t tolerate the drugs or whose symptoms are not controlled by them. Dysphagia severe enough to require surgical correction occurs in up to six percent of surgical cases, and “both controlled and uncontrolled trials have shown a significant increase in flatulence, an inability to belch, and increased bowel symptoms after antireflux surgery,” the authors wrote.

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AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

AUTHORS

BARRETT

DAILY

DRUGS

EVIDENCE

GERD

NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY

PATIENTS

SYMPTOMS

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