Abstract

A relevant percentage of non-erosive reflux disease (NERD) is refractory to proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) treatment. Multichannel intraluminal impedance pH (MII-pH) monitoring should give useful pathophysiological information about refractoriness. Therefore, our aim was to assess whether this technique could be useful to guide a 'tailored' therapy in refractory NERD. We retrospectively recruited NERD patients undergoing MII-pH monitoring for unsuccessful treatment. All patients had undergone upper endoscopy, and those with erosive esophagitis were excluded. No patient received PPI during MII-pH monitoring. Subjects were subgrouped into three categories: acid reflux, non-acid reflux and functional heartburn. MII-pH-guided therapy was performed for 4 weeks as follows: patients with acid reflux received PPI at double dose, patients with non-acid reflux PPI at full dose plus alginate four times a day and patients with functional heartburn levosulpiride 75 mg per day. A visual analog scale (VAS) ranging from 0 to 100 mm was administered before and after such tailored therapy to evaluate overall symptoms. Responders were defined by VAS improvement of at least 40%. Sixty-nine patients with refractory NERD were selected (female–male ratio 43 : 26, mean age 47.6±15.2 years). Overall effectiveness of tailored therapy was 84% without statistical difference among subgroups (88.5% acid reflux, 92% non-acid reflux, 66.6% functional heartburn; P=0.06). Univariate analysis showed that therapy failure directly correlated with functional heartburn diagnosis (OR=4.60) and suggested a trend toward a negative correlation with smoking and a positive one with nausea. However, at multivariate analysis, these parameters were not significant. Functional heartburn experienced a lower median percent VAS reduction than acid reflux (52.5% versus 66.6%, P<0.01) even if equal to non-acid reflux (66.6%). In conclusion, a tailored approach to refractory NERD, guided by MII-pH monitoring, demonstrated to be effective and should be promising to cure symptom persistence after conventional therapy failure. Nevertheless, standardized guidelines are advisable.

Highlights

  • Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a chronic disorder characterized by abnormal exposure of esophageal mucosa to gastric content, resulting in different troublesome symptoms, with heartburn and regurgitation being the most common.[1]

  • non-erosive reflux disease (NERD) is a frequent finding in clinical practice; refractoriness to pump inhibitor (PPI) treatment is quite common

  • There is a clear evidence that the response rate to PPI administration is lower in subjects with NERD than in patients with erosive esophagitis.[9,14]

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Summary

Introduction

Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a chronic disorder characterized by abnormal exposure of esophageal mucosa to gastric content, resulting in different troublesome symptoms, with heartburn and regurgitation being the most common.[1]. The treatment of NERD consists mainly in modifications of dietary and lifestyle habits and proton pump inhibitor (PPI) assumption. Despite these cautions, there is no improvement of the symptoms in a relevant percentage of patients (refractory NERD). Compared with traditional pH monitoring, it allows the identification of both acid and non-acid reflux episodes, leading to differentiate NERD subtypes

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