Abstract
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is common, but less so than widely reported because of inconsistencies in definition. In clinical practice, the diagnosis is usually based on a symptom assessment without testing, and the extent of diagnostic testing pursued should be limited to that which guides management or which protects the patient from the risks of a potentially morbid treatment or an undetected early (or imminent) esophageal adenocarcinoma or which does both. When testing is pursued, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy is the most useful initial diagnostic test because it evaluates for the major potential morbidities (Barrett’s, stricture, and cancer) associated with GERD and facilitates the identification of some alternative diagnostic possibilities such as eosinophilic esophagitis. However, endoscopy is insensitive for diagnosing GERD because most patients with GERD have non-erosive reflux disease, a persistent diagnostic dilemma. Although many studies have tried to objectify the diagnosis of GERD with improved technology, this is ultimately a pragmatic diagnosis based on response to proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy, and, in the end, response to PPI therapy becomes the major indication for continued PPI therapy. Conversely, in the absence of objective criteria for GERD and the absence of apparent clinical benefit, PPI therapy is not indicated and should be discontinued. PPIs are well tolerated and safe, but nothing is perfectly safe, and in the absence of measurable benefit, even a miniscule risk dominates the risk-benefit assessment.
Highlights
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is common, but less so than widely reported because of inconsistencies in definition
How is gastroesophageal reflux disease defined? The typical symptoms of GERD are heartburn and regurgitation
The diagnosis is commonly based on a symptom assessment without testing, and, as a general rule, the extent of diagnostic testing should be limited to tests which guide management decisions, detect alternate diagnoses and/or protect the patient from the risk of an inappropriate treatment
Summary
F1000 Faculty Reviews are written by members of the prestigious F1000 Faculty. They are commissioned and are peer reviewed before publication to ensure that the final, published version is comprehensive and accessible. Another offshoot of the success with PPIs in resolving reflux esophagitis has been the emergence of the logic in clinical practice that “if some is good, more is better” with respect to PPI dosage and symptom control, often ignoring the possibility that the syndrome in question had only a limited relationship to gastric acid secretion in the first place This paradigm is especially relevant to suspected “atypical symptoms of GERD”; the observation that some cases of chronic laryngitis, cough, or wheezing improve with PPI therapy has led to the practice that all cases are being treated with high doses of PPIs for extended periods. Hypergastrinemia and increased bacterial colonization of the stomach can be experimentally demonstrated, but there have been no instances of gastric cancers, esophageal cancers, or carcinoids linked to chronic PPI therapy in
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