Abstract

Abstract Background and aim Laparoscopic Heller-Dor (LHD) is an effective treatment for esophageal achalasia, with good long-term results in more than 85–90% of patients. It remains controversial whether LHD is also indicated in the end-stage disease when the esophagus has a sigmoid shape. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcome of LHD in patients with end-stage achalasia, as compared to patients with megaesophagus but without a sigmoid shape. Methods From 1992 to 2020, patients with a radiological diagnosis of sigmoid-shaped esophagus (radiological stage IV achalasia: group SE) and patients with straight, larger than 6 cm in diameter esophagus (radiological stage III achalasia: group NSE), both treated with LHD, were compared. Treatment failure was defined as the persistence or reoccurrence of an Eckardt score > 3, or the need for retreatment. Results During the study period, 164 such patients were observed: 73 patients in the SE group and 91 in the NSE group. The patients’ demographic and clinical parameters are summarised in Table 1. The median follow-up was 67 months (IQR: 24–106). No intra or postoperative mortality was recorded. There were 7 mucosal lesions: 2 in the SE group and 5 in the NSE group (P = 0.45). A positive outcome was obtained in 73% of patients in the SE group, as compared to 90% in the NSE group (P = 0.007, Table 2). All the patients whose surgery failed subsequently underwent one or more endoscopic pneumatic dilations. The overall success rate of the combination of LHD and endoscopic dilations was 83.6% in the SE group and all patients in the NSE group. The persisting failures had additional treatments: 4 patients a redo-myotomy, one each a botox injection, POEM and only one patient had an esophagectomy; the remaining 5 patients refused additional treatments. Postoperative 24-hour pH-monitoring was abnormal in 16.6% in SE group and 8.3% in NSE group (P = 0.33). Conclusion In end-stage achalasia patients, LHD may still achieve good results by relieving symptoms in more than 70% of patients. Therefore, LHD may still be the first surgical option to be offered to these patients before esophagectomy.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call