Efficacy of transoral fundoplication vs omeprazole for treatment of regurgitation in a randomized controlled trial. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND & AIMS: Transoral esophagogastric fundoplication (TF) can decrease or eliminate features of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) in some patients whose symptoms persist despite proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy. We performed a prospective, sham-controlled trial to determine if TF reduced troublesome regurgitation to a greater extent than PPIs in patients with GERD. METHODS: We screened 696 patients with troublesome regurgitation despite daily PPI use with 3 validated GERD-specific symptom scales, on and off PPIs. Those with at least troublesome regurgitation (based on the Montreal definition) on PPIs underwent barium swallow, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, 48-hour esophageal pH monitoring (off PPIs), and high-resolution esophageal manometry analyses. Patients with GERD and hiatal hernias ≤2 cm were randomly assigned to groups that underwent TF and then received 6 months of placebo (n = 87), or sham surgery and 6 months of once- or twice-daily omeprazole (controls, n = 42). Patients were blinded to therapy during follow-up period and reassessed at 2, 12, and 26 weeks. At 6 months, patients underwent 48-hour esophageal pH monitoring and esophagogastroduodenoscopy. RESULTS: By intention-to-treat analysis, TF eliminated troublesome regurgitation in a larger proportion of patients (67%) than PPIs (45%) (P = .023). A larger proportion of controls had no response at 3 months (36%) than subjects that received TF (11%; P = .004). Control of esophageal pH improved after TF (mean 9.3% before and 6.3% after; P < .001), but not after sham surgery (mean 8.6% before and 8.9% after). Subjects from both groups who completed the protocol had similar reductions in GERD symptom scores. Severe complications were rare (3 subjects receiving TF and 1 receiving the sham surgery). CONCLUSIONS: TF was an effective treatment for patients with GERD symptoms, particularly in those with persistent regurgitation despite PPI therapy, based on evaluation 6 months after the procedure. Clinicaltrials.gov no: NCT01136980.

authors

  • Hunter, John Gerard
  • Kahrilas, Peter J
  • Bell, Reginald C W
  • Wilson, Erik B
  • Trad, Karim S
  • Dolan, James P
  • Perry, Kyle A
  • Oelschlager, Brant K
  • Soper, Nathaniel J
  • Snyder, Brad E
  • Burch, Miguel A
  • Melvin, William Scott
  • Reavis, Kevin M
  • Turgeon, Daniel G
  • Hungness, Eric S
  • Diggs, Brian S

publication date

  • October 13, 2014

Research

keywords

  • Fundoplication
  • Gastroesophageal Reflux
  • Omeprazole
  • Proton Pump Inhibitors

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84921328036

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1053/j.gastro.2014.10.009

PubMed ID

  • 25448925

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 148

issue

  • 2