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Gastroesophageal reflux disease and antireflux surgery

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Title: Gastroesophageal reflux disease and antireflux surgery


1
Gastroesophageal reflux disease and antireflux
surgery
  • Brannon Hyde, MD

2
Learning objectives
  • Understand the natural history of reflux disease
  • Understand how to identify candidates for
    antireflux surgery
  • Understand the complications of antireflux
    surgery and patients satisfaction with surgery

3
Why do we care about reflux?
  • Americans experience reflux symptoms
  • 44 monthly
  • 20 weekly
  • 4-7 daily
  • Most common gastrointestinal diagnosis on
    outpatient physician visits
  • Frequency and severity does not predict
    esophagitis, stricture, or cancer development

4
Definition of GERD
  • Montreal consensus panel (44 experts)
  • a condition which develops when the reflux of
    stomach contents causes troublesome symptoms
    and/or complications
  • Troublesomepatient gets to decide when reflux
    interferes with lifestyle

Vakil N, et al. Am J Gastroenterol 20061011900
5
Clinical presentation
  • Heartburn
  • 1-2 hours after eating, often at night, antacid
    relief
  • Regurgitation
  • Spontaneous return of gastric contents proximal
    to GE jxn less well relieved with antacids
  • Dysphagia (40)difficulty with swallowing should
    prompt search for pathologic condition

6
Clinical presentation
  • Atypical symptoms (20-25)
  • Cough
  • Asthma
  • Hoarseness
  • Non-cardiac chest pain

7
Diagnosis
  • Diagnosis based on symptoms alone is correct in
    only 2/3 patients
  • Differential (ALL CAN KILL YOU!)
  • Achalasia
  • Diffuse esophageal spasm
  • Other esophageal motility disorder
  • Cancer
  • Ulcer disease
  • Coronary artery disease

8
So Ive got GERD, whats going to happen to me?
  • Spectrum of disease theory
  • Nonerosive disease ? erosive disease ? Barretts
    ? esophageal adenocarcinoma

Am J Gastroenterol 200499946.
9
3,894 patients had baseline and repeat endoscopy
at 2 years, regardless of symptoms. Conclusion
progression and regression occur despite PPI
therapy
ProGERD study
Am J Gastroent 20061012457-62
Severe esophagitis
Mild esophagitis
10
So I can diagnose it, and I know how bad it can
get, but why does heartburn and regurgitation
happen in the first place?
  • Answer alteration from normal physiology
  • Normally, the lower esophageal sphincter exists
    as a zone of high pressure between esophagus and
    stomach when the HPZ is lost, reflux occurs

11
Proximal esophagus
Swallow
  • Transducer tracing identifies the LES
  • High pressure drops only after a swallow or when
    fundus is distended with gas (to belch)

Distal esophagus
Distal esophagus
Distal esophagus
Distal esophagus
Relaxation of LES
Gastric baseline
12
Physiology of antireflux barrier
  • Three components of high pressure zone
  • Absolute pressure
  • Overall length
  • Intra-abdominal length

13
Overall length shortens as stomach distends,
increasing the pressure necessary to maintain
competence (neck on a balloon)
14
Physiology of antireflux barrier
  • If intra-abdominal length is short, LES pressure
    can be overcome by small increases in
    intra-abdominal pressure
  • Increased abdominal pressure needs even
    distribution over high pressure zone abdominal
    length to prevent reflux

15
Normal physiology
If sufficient intraabdominal length is present,
squeeze (increased abdominal pressure) will occur
around neck of balloon, and reflux will not
occur
16
Physiology of antireflux barrier
17
Pathophysiology of GERD
  • Fundic distention (overeating) delayed gastric
    emptying (high fat)
  • Lower esophageal sphincter is pulled distally by
    expanding fundus
  • Squamous epithelium exposed to gastric juice
  • Repeated exposure ? columnarization

18
What does my body do to compensate for reflux
esophagitis?
  • Compensation
  • Increased swallowing ? saliva bathes injured
    mucosa, alleviating discomfort
  • Results in aerophagia, bloating, and belching
  • Distention leads to further repetitive injury to
    the terminal squamous epithelium in distal
    esophagus

19
Pathophysiology of GERD
  • Extension of inflammation into muscularis propria
    causes progressive loss in length and pressure of
    the LESesophageal shortening
  • Loss of LES leads to regurgitation, heartburn,
    and subsequent severe esophagitis

20
What role does a hiatal hernia play?
  • Greater gastric dilatation is necessary to open
    LES in patients with intact angle of HIS compared
    to those with a hiatal hernia
  • Reflux occurs easier

lt 3 cm
gt 3 cm
21
So I have a defective sphincter, what
complications will I have?
  • Esophagitis (mucosal injury) with or without
    heartburn
  • Reflux chest pain syndrome
  • Respiratory complications
  • Metaplastic and neoplastic complications

22
Why is esophagitis bad?
  • Acid alone does minimal damage, but is highly
    toxic in combination with pepsin
  • Bile reflux alone does minimal damage, but when
    coupled with gastric acid, is destructive to
    esophageal mucosa
  • Decrease acid (with PPI or surgery), and
    esophageal lining heals

23
What is reflux chest pain syndrome?
  • Heartburn without esophagitis
  • bile salts inhibit pepsin
  • acid pH inactivates trypsin
  • pain comes from acidic gastric juice breaking
    mucosal barrier and irritating nerve endings

24
Respiratory complications
  • Reflux and aspiration of gastric contents induces
    asthma
  • Correlation between hiatal hernia and pulmonary
    fibrosis
  • Pathologic acid exposure often seen in proximal
    esophagus in patients with asthma
  • Simultaneous tracheal and esophageal pH
    monitoring shows acidification of trachea in
    concert with esophagus

25
What metaplastic complications can arise?
  • Norman Barrett (1950) first described the process
    whereby the esophageal squamous epithelium
    changes to columnar epithelium
  • Occurs in 7-10 of patients with GERD
  • Factors predisposing to Barretts
  • Early-onset GERD
  • Abnormal LES or motility disorder
  • Mixed reflux of gastric and duodenal contents

26
What are the neoplastic complications?
Goblet cells
  • Barretts metaplasia harbors dysplasia in 15-25
  • 5-10 is high-grade dysplasia

High grade dysplasia structure of glands
becoming disorganized
27
So I understand a little about reflux who needs
an operation?
  • Need for continuous drug treatment or escalating
    dose of PPI
  • Relatively young
  • Financial burden or noncompliance with PPI
  • Patient choice

28
How do you know Im a candidate for surgery?
  • Establish GERD as underlying cause of symptoms
  • Estimate risk of progressive disease
  • Determine presence or absence of esophageal
    shortening
  • Evaluate esophageal body function

29
How do you know Im a candidate for surgery?
  • Factors predictive of successful outcome
    following antireflux surgery (n 199)
  • Abnormal score on 24-hour esophageal pH
    monitoring (p lt 0.001)
  • Presence of typical symptoms of GERD (heartburn
    and regurgitation) (plt 0.001)
  • Symptomatic improvement in response to acid
    suppressive therapy (p 0.02)

J Gastrointest Surg 19993292-300
30
What specific studies do I need preoperatively?
  • Endoscopy
  • 24-hour ambulatory pH monitoring
  • Radiograph
  • Esophageal body and gastric function

31
Preoperative evaluation endoscopy
  • Amounts to the physical examination
  • Strictures or large hiatal hernia may indicate
    shortened esophagus
  • High-grade dysplasia or a mass in the esophageal,
    gastric, or duodenal lumen will change management

32
Preoperative evaluation 24-hour pH monitoring
  • Rationale gold standard for diagnosis of GERD
  • Quantifies actual time the esophageal mucosa is
    exposed to gastric juice
  • Measures the ability of the esophagus to clear
    refluxed acid

33
Preoperative evaluation 24-hour pH monitoring
  • Correlates esophageal acid exposure with patients
    symptoms
  • Without abnormal pH study, surgery is unlikely to
    benefit
  • Gives a composite score (Johnson-DeMeester score)
    highly sensitive and specific (gt96) for
    diagnosing GERD

34
Johnson-DeMeester normal values for esophageal pH
lt 4 (n 50)
J Clin Gastroenterol 8(suppl. 1)52-58, 1986.
35
Preop evaluation swallow study
  • Only 40 of patients with classic symptoms of
    GERD will have reflux observed on radiography
  • Assess for
  • Esophageal shortening
  • Hiatal hernia (80)
  • Paraesophageal hernia
  • Stricture or obstructing lesion
  • Beading or corkscrewing (motility disorders)

36
Manometry
Rules out esophageal motility disorders Esophagea
l body dysfunction (achalasia or aperistalsis)
should change management.
37
So I have reflux, and I think I want surgery
what surgery do I have?
  • The most common antireflux operation is the
    laparoscopic fundoplication
  • Crural dissection, identification and
    preservation of both vagi
  • 25 have left hepatic artery coming from left
    gastric artery in the gastrohepatic ligament
  • Circumferential dissection of esophagus

38
So I have reflux, and I want surgery what
surgery do I have?
  • Elements of laparoscopic Nissen
  • Crural closure
  • Fundic mobilization by division of short gastrics
  • Creation of short, loose fundoplication by
    enveloping anterior and posterior wall around
    lower esophagus

39
That operation looks nice, are people satisfied
with it?
  • Patient satisfaction is high (86-97)
  • Long-term symptom relief (heartburn and
    regurgitation) in 84-97
  • Symptomatic failure rate 3-13
  • heartburn and regurgitation
  • Does not correlate with acidic reflux exposure
  • OPERATION DID NOTHING for 3-13!

Surgeon, August 2009224.
40
How will I feel after that operation?
  • Bloating and increased flatulence (9-53)
  • Most common side effect
  • Different scoring systems account for range
  • Pre-operative symptom scores are largely unknown

Surgeon, August 2009224.
41
What are the real bad things that can happen to
me?
  • Review of 10,489 laparoscopic antireflux
    procedures
  • Complications
  • Wrap herniation (early) 1.3
  • Pneumothorax 1.0
  • All others lt 1 (perforation, hemorrhage,
    pneumonia, abscess, splenic injury, trocar
    hernia, effusion, PE, ulcer, atelectasis, wound
    infection, MI, splenectomy)

JACS 2001 193(4) 428-39
42
How will I feel several months later?
  • Early dysphagia
  • usually transient (lt6 weeks)
  • Persistent side effects (gt1 month)
  • Bloating 9
  • Reflux 4
  • Dysphagia 3
  • Often poorly defined

JACS 2001 193(4) 428-39 Surgeon, August
2009224.
43
How do patients fare a decade down the line?
  • 10-year follow-up of 250 patients
  • 83 highly satisfied with outcome
  • 84 had good or excellent control of heartburn
  • 17 revision operation (usually 3-7)
  • Recurrent hiatal hernia, dysphagia, reflux,
    bleeding (early takeback protocol for dysphagia)
  • 21 used acid-suppressive medication

JACS 2007205570
44
Well, do I have to take the purple pill after the
operation?
  • Use of acid-suppressive medication after
    antireflux surgery varies (21-62)
  • But, only 20-30 with reflux-like symptoms
    after surgery have positive pH studies

JACS 2007205570
45
Series are great, Doc, but what about a
randomized trial?
  • Randomized trial comparing treatment of GERD with
    omeprazole (n 154) and antireflux surgery (n
    144)
  • Treatment successno symptoms or esophagitis (p lt
    0.002)
  • 67 surgical
  • 47 medical
  • Dysphagia, bloating, rectal flatulence common in
    surgical group

Brit J Surg 200794198.
46
Does surgery offer any benefit to avoiding cancer?
  • Cancer risk in patient with reflux symptoms is lt
    1 in 10,000 per patient year
  • No benefit to avoidance of Barretts or
    adenocarcinoma with surgery compared to PPI
    therapy
  • Low morbidity and mortality risks associated with
    laparoscopic antireflux surgery dwarf potential
    benefit of avoiding cancer

Gastroent 20081351392.
47
What does all of this mean, should I have surgery
or not?
  • Surgery wins over PPIs if you dont mind trading
    heartburn and reflux for bloating, inability to
    belch, and excessive flatulence
  • Not in everybody, BUT IT COULD BE YOU!
  • Nevertheless, 86-97 of patients are satisfied
    with surgery

Gastroent 20081351392.
48
Doc, with all that bloating, do you have to make
the wrap so tight?
Toupet
Nissen
270 degree wrap
Anterior (Dor)
49
So you dont have to make it so tight? Great!
  • Complete fundoplication offers superior
    protection to reflux
  • Increased incidence of dysphagia, inability to
    belch, and excessive flatus
  • Partial wraps offer less protection against
    reflux, but also less symptoms
  • Up to 51 may have pathologic esophageal acid
    exposure on 24-hour pH monitoring

Surg Endos 1997111080.
50
So partial wraps really dont help to stop
reflux so who needs one?
  • Complete now considered superior to partial even
    in patients with weak esophageal peristalsis
  • Exceptions
  • achalasiaanterior wrap utilized with myotomy
  • Aperistalis (ie, scleroderma)

51
Well Doc, Ive got asthma, too. How does that
influence surgery?
  • Once reflux induced asthma is established, PPI
    therapy is instituted
  • 25-50 have relief of respiratory symptoms
  • lt15 have improvement in pulmonary function
  • Antireflux surgery
  • 90 of children and 70 of adults have relief
  • 33 have improvement in pulmonary function

Am J Gastroenterol 200398987
52
Just to wrap up
  • PPIs work to control symptoms and esophagitis,
    but require life-long treatment
  • Successful antireflux surgery is based on
    abnormal 24-hr pH score, typical GERD symptoms,
    and symptomatic improvement in response to acid
    suppression therapy
  • Having antireflux surgery is a patient-centered
    decision with a riskbenefit ratio that can
    really only be weighed by the patient

53
  • ANY QUESTIONS?

54
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