Abstract

BackgroundHigh-quality documentation of dumping symptoms after esophagectomy is currently limited. The aim of the study was to describe the incidence of symptoms associated with dumping syndrome and their relationship with health-related quality of life after esophagectomy. MethodsThe study cohort was identified from prospective IRB-approved databases from two high-volume esophagectomy centers. Patients that were alive and without evidence of recurrence in April 2018 completed the validated Dumping Symptom Rating Scale and health-related quality of life questionnaires. Compound dumping symptom score was created by combining the individual scores for severity and frequency for each symptom. ResultsIn total, 171 patients who underwent esophagectomy 1995–2017 responded to the questionnaires, corresponding to a response rate of 77.0%. Median age was 66 years and median time from operation to survey was 5.5 years. Absent or mild problems in all nine dumping symptoms were reported by 94 (59.5%) patients; 19 (12.0%) patients reported moderate or severe problems in at least three symptoms, the most common being postprandial “need to lie down,” “diarrhea,” and “stomach cramps.” Increasing compound dumping symptom score was associated with significantly decreased function scores in all aspects of health-related quality of life except physical functioning (P < 0.005). ConclusionsEsophagectomy has the potential to change long-term eating patterns; however, the majority of patients in the study did not have severe postoperative dumping symptoms. On the other hand, moderate-to-severe dumping symptoms, which were reported by 12% of patients in this study, were strongly associated with decreased health-related quality of life.

Highlights

  • The study was accepted for the Congress 2020 for the European Society for the Diseases of the Esophagus

  • This study included a cohort of short- and long-term survivors after esophagectomy from two high-volume centers for esophageal surgery

  • The results show that the majority of patients do not report problems with dumping symptoms after esophagectomy

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Summary

Introduction

The study was accepted for the Congress 2020 for the European Society for the Diseases of the Esophagus. Esophagectomy is often associated with significant postoperative gastrointestinal symptoms that adversely impact patients’ health-related quality of life (HRQOL).[1,2] Recent improvement in survival of patients undergoing esophagectomy for cancer has increased the focus towards understanding and improving the long-term functional outcomes in this patient population. The diagnosis of dumping syndrome can be defined as either “early” with symptoms occurring 10–30 min after a meal, or “late” with symptoms presenting 2–3 h after oral intake. High-quality documentation of dumping symptoms after esophagectomy is currently limited. The aim of the study was to describe the incidence of symptoms associated with dumping syndrome and their relationship with health-related quality of life after esophagectomy

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