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Late ERCP After Cholecystectomy Linked with Worse Outcomes

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Thu, 08/08/2024 - 16:49

First-time endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is increasingly being performed more than one year after cholecystectomy, leading to a rise in morbidity and adverse outcomes, according to investigators.

These findings suggest a need for more careful patient selection with ERCP, and greater reliance upon noninvasive imaging prior to considering the procedure, reported lead author Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, MD, of Loma Linda University Health, Loma Linda, California, and colleagues.

Dr. Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, Loma Linda (Calif.) University Health
Dr. Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam

“It is assumed that cholecystectomy is a definitive procedure for symptomatic gallstone disease in patients without concomitant choledocholithiasis,” the investigators wrote in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. “This is because the development of primary choledocholithiasis is rare. Despite this, many patients have persistent or new gastrointestinal symptoms post cholecystectomy.”

Symptoms such as a dilated bile duct or abnormal liver function tests may suggest choledocholithiasis or sphincter of Oddi disorders (SOD), they noted, but recent data supporting ERCP for SOD show no significant benefit for patients with normal-sized ducts.

“Guidelines advocate for confirming the presence of choledocholithiasis using magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) or endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) given the substantial risks associated with ERCP,” Dr. Thiruvengadam and colleagues wrote.

Real-world implementation of this and associated strategies, however, remain unclear, prompting the present study.

The dataset, drawn from the Optum Clinformatics Data Mart, included 583,712 adults who had undergone cholecystectomy from 2004 to 2019, focusing on 4274 individuals who had their first ERCP more than one year post surgery. The investigators assessed the incidence, characteristics, and outcomes of these late ERCP procedures, exploring their association with patient comorbidities and the use of biliary imaging techniques such as MRCP and EUS.

From 2004 to 2021, use of noninvasive biliary imaging approximately doubled from 35.9% to 65.5% (P < .001). Yet incidence of first-time ERCP more than 1 year after cholecystectomy increased much more — by eightfold — from 0.5 to 4.2 per 1000 person-years (P < .001). Less than half (44%) of these late ERCP procedures involved gallstone removal.

Patients undergoing late ERCP were more likely to have higher baseline comorbidities, including disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBI) and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease. They were also more likely to be taking an antispasmodic, anxiolytic, or chronic opioid medication.

“Late ERCP is more common and associated with worse outcomes, presumably because of higher baseline comorbidities that overlap with DGBI and mimickers of choledocholithiasis,” the investigators noted. “These highly symptomatic individuals are more likely to undergo noninvasive biliary imaging, which seems to be prompting more late ERCP.”

In turn, late ERCP is incurring more adverse events, including post-ERCP pancreatitis (7.1%), hospitalization (13.1%), and new chronic opioid use (9.7%).

“Given the known risks of ERCP, especially in this context, there remains a need to be more restrictive with offering ERCP in this setting,” Dr. Thiruvengadam and colleagues concluded. “ERCP should be used sparingly for patients who do not have confirmed choledocholithiasis until future studies ... can define which patients with a remote history of cholecystectomy respond to ERCP interventions.”

The investigators disclosed relationships with Olympus, Medtronic, ACI, and others.

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First-time endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is increasingly being performed more than one year after cholecystectomy, leading to a rise in morbidity and adverse outcomes, according to investigators.

These findings suggest a need for more careful patient selection with ERCP, and greater reliance upon noninvasive imaging prior to considering the procedure, reported lead author Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, MD, of Loma Linda University Health, Loma Linda, California, and colleagues.

Dr. Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, Loma Linda (Calif.) University Health
Dr. Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam

“It is assumed that cholecystectomy is a definitive procedure for symptomatic gallstone disease in patients without concomitant choledocholithiasis,” the investigators wrote in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. “This is because the development of primary choledocholithiasis is rare. Despite this, many patients have persistent or new gastrointestinal symptoms post cholecystectomy.”

Symptoms such as a dilated bile duct or abnormal liver function tests may suggest choledocholithiasis or sphincter of Oddi disorders (SOD), they noted, but recent data supporting ERCP for SOD show no significant benefit for patients with normal-sized ducts.

“Guidelines advocate for confirming the presence of choledocholithiasis using magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) or endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) given the substantial risks associated with ERCP,” Dr. Thiruvengadam and colleagues wrote.

Real-world implementation of this and associated strategies, however, remain unclear, prompting the present study.

The dataset, drawn from the Optum Clinformatics Data Mart, included 583,712 adults who had undergone cholecystectomy from 2004 to 2019, focusing on 4274 individuals who had their first ERCP more than one year post surgery. The investigators assessed the incidence, characteristics, and outcomes of these late ERCP procedures, exploring their association with patient comorbidities and the use of biliary imaging techniques such as MRCP and EUS.

From 2004 to 2021, use of noninvasive biliary imaging approximately doubled from 35.9% to 65.5% (P < .001). Yet incidence of first-time ERCP more than 1 year after cholecystectomy increased much more — by eightfold — from 0.5 to 4.2 per 1000 person-years (P < .001). Less than half (44%) of these late ERCP procedures involved gallstone removal.

Patients undergoing late ERCP were more likely to have higher baseline comorbidities, including disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBI) and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease. They were also more likely to be taking an antispasmodic, anxiolytic, or chronic opioid medication.

“Late ERCP is more common and associated with worse outcomes, presumably because of higher baseline comorbidities that overlap with DGBI and mimickers of choledocholithiasis,” the investigators noted. “These highly symptomatic individuals are more likely to undergo noninvasive biliary imaging, which seems to be prompting more late ERCP.”

In turn, late ERCP is incurring more adverse events, including post-ERCP pancreatitis (7.1%), hospitalization (13.1%), and new chronic opioid use (9.7%).

“Given the known risks of ERCP, especially in this context, there remains a need to be more restrictive with offering ERCP in this setting,” Dr. Thiruvengadam and colleagues concluded. “ERCP should be used sparingly for patients who do not have confirmed choledocholithiasis until future studies ... can define which patients with a remote history of cholecystectomy respond to ERCP interventions.”

The investigators disclosed relationships with Olympus, Medtronic, ACI, and others.

First-time endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is increasingly being performed more than one year after cholecystectomy, leading to a rise in morbidity and adverse outcomes, according to investigators.

These findings suggest a need for more careful patient selection with ERCP, and greater reliance upon noninvasive imaging prior to considering the procedure, reported lead author Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, MD, of Loma Linda University Health, Loma Linda, California, and colleagues.

Dr. Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, Loma Linda (Calif.) University Health
Dr. Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam

“It is assumed that cholecystectomy is a definitive procedure for symptomatic gallstone disease in patients without concomitant choledocholithiasis,” the investigators wrote in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. “This is because the development of primary choledocholithiasis is rare. Despite this, many patients have persistent or new gastrointestinal symptoms post cholecystectomy.”

Symptoms such as a dilated bile duct or abnormal liver function tests may suggest choledocholithiasis or sphincter of Oddi disorders (SOD), they noted, but recent data supporting ERCP for SOD show no significant benefit for patients with normal-sized ducts.

“Guidelines advocate for confirming the presence of choledocholithiasis using magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) or endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) given the substantial risks associated with ERCP,” Dr. Thiruvengadam and colleagues wrote.

Real-world implementation of this and associated strategies, however, remain unclear, prompting the present study.

The dataset, drawn from the Optum Clinformatics Data Mart, included 583,712 adults who had undergone cholecystectomy from 2004 to 2019, focusing on 4274 individuals who had their first ERCP more than one year post surgery. The investigators assessed the incidence, characteristics, and outcomes of these late ERCP procedures, exploring their association with patient comorbidities and the use of biliary imaging techniques such as MRCP and EUS.

From 2004 to 2021, use of noninvasive biliary imaging approximately doubled from 35.9% to 65.5% (P < .001). Yet incidence of first-time ERCP more than 1 year after cholecystectomy increased much more — by eightfold — from 0.5 to 4.2 per 1000 person-years (P < .001). Less than half (44%) of these late ERCP procedures involved gallstone removal.

Patients undergoing late ERCP were more likely to have higher baseline comorbidities, including disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBI) and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease. They were also more likely to be taking an antispasmodic, anxiolytic, or chronic opioid medication.

“Late ERCP is more common and associated with worse outcomes, presumably because of higher baseline comorbidities that overlap with DGBI and mimickers of choledocholithiasis,” the investigators noted. “These highly symptomatic individuals are more likely to undergo noninvasive biliary imaging, which seems to be prompting more late ERCP.”

In turn, late ERCP is incurring more adverse events, including post-ERCP pancreatitis (7.1%), hospitalization (13.1%), and new chronic opioid use (9.7%).

“Given the known risks of ERCP, especially in this context, there remains a need to be more restrictive with offering ERCP in this setting,” Dr. Thiruvengadam and colleagues concluded. “ERCP should be used sparingly for patients who do not have confirmed choledocholithiasis until future studies ... can define which patients with a remote history of cholecystectomy respond to ERCP interventions.”

The investigators disclosed relationships with Olympus, Medtronic, ACI, and others.

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Environment More Than Genes Affects Age of IBD Diagnosis

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 08/08/2024 - 16:00

Early-life and environmental exposures are more strongly linked to age at diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) than genetic factors, a large study of IBD patients reported.

Published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology , the study found that environment influences the onset of both ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD), and exposures typical in Western society lower the age of diagnosis. These factors include birth in a developed nation, delivery by C-section, and more bathrooms in the home, according to Oriana M. Damas, MD, MSCTI, an associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Florida and colleagues.

associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
courtesy University of Miami Health System
Dr. Oriana M. Damas

Environmental factors explained 21% of the variance in age of CD diagnosis and 39% of the variance in age of UC diagnosis. In models incorporating both genetic and environmental risk scores, the environment was the only significant factor associated with younger age of IBD diagnosis in all groups.

Several epidemiologic studies have examined environmental culprits in IBD, and others have examined genetic risk factors, Dr. Damas said in an interview. “But we had not seen any studies that examined the influence of both [of] these on age of IBD development.” Her group’s working hypothesis that environment would have a greater effect than genetics was borne out.

“Additionally, very few studies have examined the contribution of genetics or environmental factors in Hispanic individuals, and our study examined the contribution of these factors in this understudied population,” she added.

According to Dr. Damas, the findings’ most immediate clinical relevance is for counseling people with a family history of IBD. “I think it’s important for concerned patients to know that IBD is not solely genetic and that several environmental factors can shape disease risk to a greater extent than genetic predisposition,” she said

Westernization is increasingly considered a contributor to the global increase in IBD, which has been diagnosed in an estimated 2.39 million Americans . In genetically predisposed individuals, environmental culprits in developed countries are thought to negatively shape the intestinal microbiome’s composition into a less tolerant and more proinflammatory state, the authors noted. 

According to the “hygiene hypothesis,”  the oversanitization of life in the developed world is partly to blame. “A cleaner environment at home, part of the hygiene hypothesis, has been postulated as a theory to help explain the rise of autoimmune diseases in the 21st century and may play an important part in explaining our study findings,” the authors wrote.

Population-based studies have also pointed to antibiotics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, smoking, cesarean delivery, lack of breastfeeding, and nonexposure to farm animals as other risk factors for IBD. 
 

Study Details

To compare the effect of environmental vs genetic risk factors, the questionnaire-based study surveyed 2952 IBD patients from a tertiary care referral center — 58.9% with CD, 45.83% of Hispanic background, and 53.18% of non-Hispanic White (NHW) ethnicity. There were too few available Black and Asian patients to be included in the cohort. Data were collected from 2017 to 2022.

The mean age of patients was 39.71 years, and 34.14% were defined as born outside of the US mainland. Foreign-born patients were further characterized as from developed nations vs developing nations; 81.3% in this subgroup came from the latter. A detailed questionnaire probed 13 potential environmental factors from type of birth to domestic living conditions, medications, and smoking across several different age groups. Blood was drawn to genotype participants and to create a genetic risk score.

Early plastic water bottle use — which has been linked to inflammatory microplastics in the intestines — and residing in homes with more than one bathroom (and presumably less exposure to infections) were also associated with younger age at diagnosis. Susceptibility to environmental exposures was similar in Hispanic and NHW patients. 

“It was interesting to find an association between reported plastic water bottle use and younger age of IBD diagnosis,” said Dr. Damas. “Because this is a self-reported intake, we need more studies to confirm this. However, this finding falls in line with other recent studies showing a potential association between microplastics and disease states, including IBD. The next step is to measure for traces of environmental contaminants in human samples of patients with IBD.”

Unlike previous studies, this analysis did not find parasitic infections, pets, and antibiotics to be associated with age of IBD diagnosis. 

Dr. Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan, associate professor of medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston
Dr. Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan

“This is an interesting and important study,” commented Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, AGAF, director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was not involved in the study. “There are few environmental risk factor studies looking at non-White populations and to that end, this is a very large and well-done analysis looking at environmental factors among Hispanic patients with IBD.”

He added that, while most studies have just compared factors between cases and controls, “this is an interesting examination of the impact of such factors on age of onset.”

Dr. Ananthakrishnan stressed, however, that further work is needed to expand on these findings.” The addition of a control group would help determine how these factors actually modify disease risk. It is also intriguing that environmental factors more strongly predict age of onset than genetic risk. That only highlights the fact that IBD is in large part an environmentally influenced disease, suggesting there is exciting opportunity for environmental modification to address disease onset.”

assistant professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City
courtesy Icahn School of Medicine
Dr. Manasi Agrawal

Offering another outsider’s perspective, Manasi Agrawal, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City and not a participant in the study, agreed that the findings highlight the contribution of early life and childhood environmental factors to IBD risk relative to genetic variants. “The relative importance of the environment compared to genetic risk toward IBD, timing of exposure, and impact on age at IBD diagnosis is a novel and important finding. These data will help contextualize how we communicate disease risk and potential prevention approaches.”

She added that future research should measure various exposures, such as pollutants in preclinical biological samples. “Mechanistic data on their downstream effects are needed to understand IBD pathogenesis and develop prevention efforts.” 

According to the authors, theirs is the first study of its kind to examine the contribution of cumulative environmental factors, age-dependent exposures, and genetic predisposition to age of IBD diagnosis in a diverse IBD cohort.

The authors listed no specific funding for this study and had no conflicts of interest to declare. Dr. Ananthakrishnan and Dr. Agrawal had no relevant competing interests.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Early-life and environmental exposures are more strongly linked to age at diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) than genetic factors, a large study of IBD patients reported.

Published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology , the study found that environment influences the onset of both ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD), and exposures typical in Western society lower the age of diagnosis. These factors include birth in a developed nation, delivery by C-section, and more bathrooms in the home, according to Oriana M. Damas, MD, MSCTI, an associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Florida and colleagues.

associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
courtesy University of Miami Health System
Dr. Oriana M. Damas

Environmental factors explained 21% of the variance in age of CD diagnosis and 39% of the variance in age of UC diagnosis. In models incorporating both genetic and environmental risk scores, the environment was the only significant factor associated with younger age of IBD diagnosis in all groups.

Several epidemiologic studies have examined environmental culprits in IBD, and others have examined genetic risk factors, Dr. Damas said in an interview. “But we had not seen any studies that examined the influence of both [of] these on age of IBD development.” Her group’s working hypothesis that environment would have a greater effect than genetics was borne out.

“Additionally, very few studies have examined the contribution of genetics or environmental factors in Hispanic individuals, and our study examined the contribution of these factors in this understudied population,” she added.

According to Dr. Damas, the findings’ most immediate clinical relevance is for counseling people with a family history of IBD. “I think it’s important for concerned patients to know that IBD is not solely genetic and that several environmental factors can shape disease risk to a greater extent than genetic predisposition,” she said

Westernization is increasingly considered a contributor to the global increase in IBD, which has been diagnosed in an estimated 2.39 million Americans . In genetically predisposed individuals, environmental culprits in developed countries are thought to negatively shape the intestinal microbiome’s composition into a less tolerant and more proinflammatory state, the authors noted. 

According to the “hygiene hypothesis,”  the oversanitization of life in the developed world is partly to blame. “A cleaner environment at home, part of the hygiene hypothesis, has been postulated as a theory to help explain the rise of autoimmune diseases in the 21st century and may play an important part in explaining our study findings,” the authors wrote.

Population-based studies have also pointed to antibiotics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, smoking, cesarean delivery, lack of breastfeeding, and nonexposure to farm animals as other risk factors for IBD. 
 

Study Details

To compare the effect of environmental vs genetic risk factors, the questionnaire-based study surveyed 2952 IBD patients from a tertiary care referral center — 58.9% with CD, 45.83% of Hispanic background, and 53.18% of non-Hispanic White (NHW) ethnicity. There were too few available Black and Asian patients to be included in the cohort. Data were collected from 2017 to 2022.

The mean age of patients was 39.71 years, and 34.14% were defined as born outside of the US mainland. Foreign-born patients were further characterized as from developed nations vs developing nations; 81.3% in this subgroup came from the latter. A detailed questionnaire probed 13 potential environmental factors from type of birth to domestic living conditions, medications, and smoking across several different age groups. Blood was drawn to genotype participants and to create a genetic risk score.

Early plastic water bottle use — which has been linked to inflammatory microplastics in the intestines — and residing in homes with more than one bathroom (and presumably less exposure to infections) were also associated with younger age at diagnosis. Susceptibility to environmental exposures was similar in Hispanic and NHW patients. 

“It was interesting to find an association between reported plastic water bottle use and younger age of IBD diagnosis,” said Dr. Damas. “Because this is a self-reported intake, we need more studies to confirm this. However, this finding falls in line with other recent studies showing a potential association between microplastics and disease states, including IBD. The next step is to measure for traces of environmental contaminants in human samples of patients with IBD.”

Unlike previous studies, this analysis did not find parasitic infections, pets, and antibiotics to be associated with age of IBD diagnosis. 

Dr. Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan, associate professor of medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston
Dr. Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan

“This is an interesting and important study,” commented Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, AGAF, director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was not involved in the study. “There are few environmental risk factor studies looking at non-White populations and to that end, this is a very large and well-done analysis looking at environmental factors among Hispanic patients with IBD.”

He added that, while most studies have just compared factors between cases and controls, “this is an interesting examination of the impact of such factors on age of onset.”

Dr. Ananthakrishnan stressed, however, that further work is needed to expand on these findings.” The addition of a control group would help determine how these factors actually modify disease risk. It is also intriguing that environmental factors more strongly predict age of onset than genetic risk. That only highlights the fact that IBD is in large part an environmentally influenced disease, suggesting there is exciting opportunity for environmental modification to address disease onset.”

assistant professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City
courtesy Icahn School of Medicine
Dr. Manasi Agrawal

Offering another outsider’s perspective, Manasi Agrawal, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City and not a participant in the study, agreed that the findings highlight the contribution of early life and childhood environmental factors to IBD risk relative to genetic variants. “The relative importance of the environment compared to genetic risk toward IBD, timing of exposure, and impact on age at IBD diagnosis is a novel and important finding. These data will help contextualize how we communicate disease risk and potential prevention approaches.”

She added that future research should measure various exposures, such as pollutants in preclinical biological samples. “Mechanistic data on their downstream effects are needed to understand IBD pathogenesis and develop prevention efforts.” 

According to the authors, theirs is the first study of its kind to examine the contribution of cumulative environmental factors, age-dependent exposures, and genetic predisposition to age of IBD diagnosis in a diverse IBD cohort.

The authors listed no specific funding for this study and had no conflicts of interest to declare. Dr. Ananthakrishnan and Dr. Agrawal had no relevant competing interests.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Early-life and environmental exposures are more strongly linked to age at diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) than genetic factors, a large study of IBD patients reported.

Published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology , the study found that environment influences the onset of both ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD), and exposures typical in Western society lower the age of diagnosis. These factors include birth in a developed nation, delivery by C-section, and more bathrooms in the home, according to Oriana M. Damas, MD, MSCTI, an associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Florida and colleagues.

associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
courtesy University of Miami Health System
Dr. Oriana M. Damas

Environmental factors explained 21% of the variance in age of CD diagnosis and 39% of the variance in age of UC diagnosis. In models incorporating both genetic and environmental risk scores, the environment was the only significant factor associated with younger age of IBD diagnosis in all groups.

Several epidemiologic studies have examined environmental culprits in IBD, and others have examined genetic risk factors, Dr. Damas said in an interview. “But we had not seen any studies that examined the influence of both [of] these on age of IBD development.” Her group’s working hypothesis that environment would have a greater effect than genetics was borne out.

“Additionally, very few studies have examined the contribution of genetics or environmental factors in Hispanic individuals, and our study examined the contribution of these factors in this understudied population,” she added.

According to Dr. Damas, the findings’ most immediate clinical relevance is for counseling people with a family history of IBD. “I think it’s important for concerned patients to know that IBD is not solely genetic and that several environmental factors can shape disease risk to a greater extent than genetic predisposition,” she said

Westernization is increasingly considered a contributor to the global increase in IBD, which has been diagnosed in an estimated 2.39 million Americans . In genetically predisposed individuals, environmental culprits in developed countries are thought to negatively shape the intestinal microbiome’s composition into a less tolerant and more proinflammatory state, the authors noted. 

According to the “hygiene hypothesis,”  the oversanitization of life in the developed world is partly to blame. “A cleaner environment at home, part of the hygiene hypothesis, has been postulated as a theory to help explain the rise of autoimmune diseases in the 21st century and may play an important part in explaining our study findings,” the authors wrote.

Population-based studies have also pointed to antibiotics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, smoking, cesarean delivery, lack of breastfeeding, and nonexposure to farm animals as other risk factors for IBD. 
 

Study Details

To compare the effect of environmental vs genetic risk factors, the questionnaire-based study surveyed 2952 IBD patients from a tertiary care referral center — 58.9% with CD, 45.83% of Hispanic background, and 53.18% of non-Hispanic White (NHW) ethnicity. There were too few available Black and Asian patients to be included in the cohort. Data were collected from 2017 to 2022.

The mean age of patients was 39.71 years, and 34.14% were defined as born outside of the US mainland. Foreign-born patients were further characterized as from developed nations vs developing nations; 81.3% in this subgroup came from the latter. A detailed questionnaire probed 13 potential environmental factors from type of birth to domestic living conditions, medications, and smoking across several different age groups. Blood was drawn to genotype participants and to create a genetic risk score.

Early plastic water bottle use — which has been linked to inflammatory microplastics in the intestines — and residing in homes with more than one bathroom (and presumably less exposure to infections) were also associated with younger age at diagnosis. Susceptibility to environmental exposures was similar in Hispanic and NHW patients. 

“It was interesting to find an association between reported plastic water bottle use and younger age of IBD diagnosis,” said Dr. Damas. “Because this is a self-reported intake, we need more studies to confirm this. However, this finding falls in line with other recent studies showing a potential association between microplastics and disease states, including IBD. The next step is to measure for traces of environmental contaminants in human samples of patients with IBD.”

Unlike previous studies, this analysis did not find parasitic infections, pets, and antibiotics to be associated with age of IBD diagnosis. 

Dr. Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan, associate professor of medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston
Dr. Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan

“This is an interesting and important study,” commented Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, AGAF, director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was not involved in the study. “There are few environmental risk factor studies looking at non-White populations and to that end, this is a very large and well-done analysis looking at environmental factors among Hispanic patients with IBD.”

He added that, while most studies have just compared factors between cases and controls, “this is an interesting examination of the impact of such factors on age of onset.”

Dr. Ananthakrishnan stressed, however, that further work is needed to expand on these findings.” The addition of a control group would help determine how these factors actually modify disease risk. It is also intriguing that environmental factors more strongly predict age of onset than genetic risk. That only highlights the fact that IBD is in large part an environmentally influenced disease, suggesting there is exciting opportunity for environmental modification to address disease onset.”

assistant professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City
courtesy Icahn School of Medicine
Dr. Manasi Agrawal

Offering another outsider’s perspective, Manasi Agrawal, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City and not a participant in the study, agreed that the findings highlight the contribution of early life and childhood environmental factors to IBD risk relative to genetic variants. “The relative importance of the environment compared to genetic risk toward IBD, timing of exposure, and impact on age at IBD diagnosis is a novel and important finding. These data will help contextualize how we communicate disease risk and potential prevention approaches.”

She added that future research should measure various exposures, such as pollutants in preclinical biological samples. “Mechanistic data on their downstream effects are needed to understand IBD pathogenesis and develop prevention efforts.” 

According to the authors, theirs is the first study of its kind to examine the contribution of cumulative environmental factors, age-dependent exposures, and genetic predisposition to age of IBD diagnosis in a diverse IBD cohort.

The authors listed no specific funding for this study and had no conflicts of interest to declare. Dr. Ananthakrishnan and Dr. Agrawal had no relevant competing interests.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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AGA Issues Guidance on Identifying, Treating Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome

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Wed, 08/21/2024 - 11:45

Clinicians and patients should become familiar with the signs and symptoms of cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS), including sudden episodes of intense nausea, vomiting, and retching amid episode-free periods, according to a new clinical practice update from the American Gastroenterological Association.

CVS affects up to 2% of U.S. adults and is more common in women, young adults, and those with a personal or family history of migraine headaches. However, most patients don’t receive a diagnosis or often experience years of delay in receiving effective treatment.

“A diagnosis is a powerful tool. Not only does it help patients make sense of debilitating symptoms, but it allows healthcare providers to create an effective treatment plan,” said author David J. Levinthal, MD, AGAF, director of the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Dr. David J. Levinthal, director of the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Dr. David J. Levinthal
“Our goal with this clinical practice update is to increase awareness of cyclic vomiting syndrome to reduce the diagnostic delay and increase patients’ access to treatment,” he said. “We hope to reach primary care, ER, and urgent care providers who are on the frontlines interacting with CVS patients seeking care, especially during an attack.”


The update was published online in Gastroenterology.

Understanding Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome

CVS is a chronic disorder of gut-brain interaction (DGBI), which is characterized by acute episodes of nausea and vomiting, separated by time without symptoms. Patients can usually identify a pattern of symptoms that show up during and between episodes.

CVS can vary, ranging from mild — with less than four episodes per year and lasting less than 2 days — to moderate-severe — with more than four episodes per year, lasting more than 2 days, and requiring at least one emergency department visit or hospitalization.

The disorder has four distinct phases — inter-episodic, prodromal, emetic, and recovery — that align with distinct treatment and management strategies. Between episodes, patients typically don’t experience repetitive vomiting but may experience symptoms such as mild nausea, indigestion, and occasional vomiting. Although CVS episodes can happen at any time, most tend to occur in the early morning.

For diagnosis, clinicians should consider CVS in adults presenting with episodic bouts of repetitive vomiting, following criteria established by the Rome Foundation. Rome IV criteria include acute-onset vomiting lasting less than 7 days, at least three discrete episodes in a year with two in the previous 6 months, and an absence of vomiting between episodes separated by at least 1 week of baseline health.


About 65% of patients with CVS experience prodromal symptoms, which last for about an hour before the onset of vomiting and may include panic, a sense of doom, and an inability to communicate effectively. During prodromal or emetic phases, patients have also reported fatigue, brain fog, restlessness, anxiety, headache, bowel urgency, abdominal pain, flushing, or shakiness.

As with migraines, CVS episodes may often be triggered by psychological and physiological factors, particularly stress. Episodes can stem from both negative stress, such as a death or relationship conflicts, as well as positive stress, such as birthdays and vacations. Other triggers include sleep deprivation, hormonal fluctuations linked to the menstrual cycle, travel, motion sickness, or acute infections.

Adult CVS is associated with several conditions, particularly mood disorders, including anxiety, depression, and panic disorder. Patients may also experience migraines, seizure disorders, or autonomic imbalances, such as postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, which may indicate pathophysiological mechanisms and routes for management.

The American Neurogastroenterology and Motility Society recommends testing to rule out similar or overlapping conditions, such as Addison’s disease, hypothyroidism, and hepatic porphyria. Diagnostic workup should include blood work, urinalysis, and one-time esophagogastroduodenoscopy or upper gastrointestinal imaging. Repeated imaging and gastric emptying scans should be avoided.
 

 

 

Providing Treatment and Prevention

For treatment, knowing the CVS phase is “essential,” the authors wrote. For instance, during the prodromal phase, abortive therapies can halt the transition to the emetic phase, and earlier intervention is associated with a higher probability of stopping an episode. The authors recommend intranasal sumatriptan, ondansetron, antihistamines, and sedatives.

During the emetic phase, supportive therapy can help terminate the episode. This may include continuing the abortive regimen and going to the emergency department for hydration and antiemetic medications. Patients may also find relief in a quiet, darker room in the emergency department, along with IV benzodiazepines, with the goal of inducing sedation.

During the recovery phase, patients should rest and focus on rehydration and nutrition to return to the well phase.

During the well or inter-episodic phase, patients can follow lifestyle measures to identify and avoid triggers, such as taking prophylactic medication (tricyclic antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and neurokinin-1 receptor antagonists such as aprepitant), reducing stress, and implementing a good sleep routine.

As part of patient education, clinicians can discuss the four phases and rehearse the actions to take to prevent or stop an episode.

“CVS has a significant impact on patients, families, and the healthcare system. The unpredictable and disruptive nature of episodes can result in reduced health-related quality of life, job loss precipitated by work absenteeism, and even divorce,” said Rosita Frazier, MD, a gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale who specializes in DGBI and CVS. Dr. Frazier, who wasn’t involved with the clinical practice update, has previously written about CVS diagnosis and management.

Dr. Rosita Frazier, gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale
Mayo Clinic Arizona
Dr. Rosita Frazier
Patients with CVS often report negative interactions with physicians, particularly in the emergency department, where they may request specific treatments based on past experiences but are labeled as “drug seeking” and denied standard medical treatment, she said.

“Providing an individualized care plan for all patients could potentially address this problem and improve the physician-patient interaction,” she said. “Educational efforts to raise awareness among the medical community and increase both patient and provider engagement can optimize outcomes and are needed to address this critical problem.”

The authors received no specific funding for this update. Dr. Levinthal is a consultant for Takeda Pharmaceuticals and Mahana. Dr. Frazier reported no relevant financial disclosures.

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Clinicians and patients should become familiar with the signs and symptoms of cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS), including sudden episodes of intense nausea, vomiting, and retching amid episode-free periods, according to a new clinical practice update from the American Gastroenterological Association.

CVS affects up to 2% of U.S. adults and is more common in women, young adults, and those with a personal or family history of migraine headaches. However, most patients don’t receive a diagnosis or often experience years of delay in receiving effective treatment.

“A diagnosis is a powerful tool. Not only does it help patients make sense of debilitating symptoms, but it allows healthcare providers to create an effective treatment plan,” said author David J. Levinthal, MD, AGAF, director of the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Dr. David J. Levinthal, director of the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Dr. David J. Levinthal
“Our goal with this clinical practice update is to increase awareness of cyclic vomiting syndrome to reduce the diagnostic delay and increase patients’ access to treatment,” he said. “We hope to reach primary care, ER, and urgent care providers who are on the frontlines interacting with CVS patients seeking care, especially during an attack.”


The update was published online in Gastroenterology.

Understanding Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome

CVS is a chronic disorder of gut-brain interaction (DGBI), which is characterized by acute episodes of nausea and vomiting, separated by time without symptoms. Patients can usually identify a pattern of symptoms that show up during and between episodes.

CVS can vary, ranging from mild — with less than four episodes per year and lasting less than 2 days — to moderate-severe — with more than four episodes per year, lasting more than 2 days, and requiring at least one emergency department visit or hospitalization.

The disorder has four distinct phases — inter-episodic, prodromal, emetic, and recovery — that align with distinct treatment and management strategies. Between episodes, patients typically don’t experience repetitive vomiting but may experience symptoms such as mild nausea, indigestion, and occasional vomiting. Although CVS episodes can happen at any time, most tend to occur in the early morning.

For diagnosis, clinicians should consider CVS in adults presenting with episodic bouts of repetitive vomiting, following criteria established by the Rome Foundation. Rome IV criteria include acute-onset vomiting lasting less than 7 days, at least three discrete episodes in a year with two in the previous 6 months, and an absence of vomiting between episodes separated by at least 1 week of baseline health.


About 65% of patients with CVS experience prodromal symptoms, which last for about an hour before the onset of vomiting and may include panic, a sense of doom, and an inability to communicate effectively. During prodromal or emetic phases, patients have also reported fatigue, brain fog, restlessness, anxiety, headache, bowel urgency, abdominal pain, flushing, or shakiness.

As with migraines, CVS episodes may often be triggered by psychological and physiological factors, particularly stress. Episodes can stem from both negative stress, such as a death or relationship conflicts, as well as positive stress, such as birthdays and vacations. Other triggers include sleep deprivation, hormonal fluctuations linked to the menstrual cycle, travel, motion sickness, or acute infections.

Adult CVS is associated with several conditions, particularly mood disorders, including anxiety, depression, and panic disorder. Patients may also experience migraines, seizure disorders, or autonomic imbalances, such as postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, which may indicate pathophysiological mechanisms and routes for management.

The American Neurogastroenterology and Motility Society recommends testing to rule out similar or overlapping conditions, such as Addison’s disease, hypothyroidism, and hepatic porphyria. Diagnostic workup should include blood work, urinalysis, and one-time esophagogastroduodenoscopy or upper gastrointestinal imaging. Repeated imaging and gastric emptying scans should be avoided.
 

 

 

Providing Treatment and Prevention

For treatment, knowing the CVS phase is “essential,” the authors wrote. For instance, during the prodromal phase, abortive therapies can halt the transition to the emetic phase, and earlier intervention is associated with a higher probability of stopping an episode. The authors recommend intranasal sumatriptan, ondansetron, antihistamines, and sedatives.

During the emetic phase, supportive therapy can help terminate the episode. This may include continuing the abortive regimen and going to the emergency department for hydration and antiemetic medications. Patients may also find relief in a quiet, darker room in the emergency department, along with IV benzodiazepines, with the goal of inducing sedation.

During the recovery phase, patients should rest and focus on rehydration and nutrition to return to the well phase.

During the well or inter-episodic phase, patients can follow lifestyle measures to identify and avoid triggers, such as taking prophylactic medication (tricyclic antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and neurokinin-1 receptor antagonists such as aprepitant), reducing stress, and implementing a good sleep routine.

As part of patient education, clinicians can discuss the four phases and rehearse the actions to take to prevent or stop an episode.

“CVS has a significant impact on patients, families, and the healthcare system. The unpredictable and disruptive nature of episodes can result in reduced health-related quality of life, job loss precipitated by work absenteeism, and even divorce,” said Rosita Frazier, MD, a gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale who specializes in DGBI and CVS. Dr. Frazier, who wasn’t involved with the clinical practice update, has previously written about CVS diagnosis and management.

Dr. Rosita Frazier, gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale
Mayo Clinic Arizona
Dr. Rosita Frazier
Patients with CVS often report negative interactions with physicians, particularly in the emergency department, where they may request specific treatments based on past experiences but are labeled as “drug seeking” and denied standard medical treatment, she said.

“Providing an individualized care plan for all patients could potentially address this problem and improve the physician-patient interaction,” she said. “Educational efforts to raise awareness among the medical community and increase both patient and provider engagement can optimize outcomes and are needed to address this critical problem.”

The authors received no specific funding for this update. Dr. Levinthal is a consultant for Takeda Pharmaceuticals and Mahana. Dr. Frazier reported no relevant financial disclosures.

Clinicians and patients should become familiar with the signs and symptoms of cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS), including sudden episodes of intense nausea, vomiting, and retching amid episode-free periods, according to a new clinical practice update from the American Gastroenterological Association.

CVS affects up to 2% of U.S. adults and is more common in women, young adults, and those with a personal or family history of migraine headaches. However, most patients don’t receive a diagnosis or often experience years of delay in receiving effective treatment.

“A diagnosis is a powerful tool. Not only does it help patients make sense of debilitating symptoms, but it allows healthcare providers to create an effective treatment plan,” said author David J. Levinthal, MD, AGAF, director of the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Dr. David J. Levinthal, director of the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Dr. David J. Levinthal
“Our goal with this clinical practice update is to increase awareness of cyclic vomiting syndrome to reduce the diagnostic delay and increase patients’ access to treatment,” he said. “We hope to reach primary care, ER, and urgent care providers who are on the frontlines interacting with CVS patients seeking care, especially during an attack.”


The update was published online in Gastroenterology.

Understanding Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome

CVS is a chronic disorder of gut-brain interaction (DGBI), which is characterized by acute episodes of nausea and vomiting, separated by time without symptoms. Patients can usually identify a pattern of symptoms that show up during and between episodes.

CVS can vary, ranging from mild — with less than four episodes per year and lasting less than 2 days — to moderate-severe — with more than four episodes per year, lasting more than 2 days, and requiring at least one emergency department visit or hospitalization.

The disorder has four distinct phases — inter-episodic, prodromal, emetic, and recovery — that align with distinct treatment and management strategies. Between episodes, patients typically don’t experience repetitive vomiting but may experience symptoms such as mild nausea, indigestion, and occasional vomiting. Although CVS episodes can happen at any time, most tend to occur in the early morning.

For diagnosis, clinicians should consider CVS in adults presenting with episodic bouts of repetitive vomiting, following criteria established by the Rome Foundation. Rome IV criteria include acute-onset vomiting lasting less than 7 days, at least three discrete episodes in a year with two in the previous 6 months, and an absence of vomiting between episodes separated by at least 1 week of baseline health.


About 65% of patients with CVS experience prodromal symptoms, which last for about an hour before the onset of vomiting and may include panic, a sense of doom, and an inability to communicate effectively. During prodromal or emetic phases, patients have also reported fatigue, brain fog, restlessness, anxiety, headache, bowel urgency, abdominal pain, flushing, or shakiness.

As with migraines, CVS episodes may often be triggered by psychological and physiological factors, particularly stress. Episodes can stem from both negative stress, such as a death or relationship conflicts, as well as positive stress, such as birthdays and vacations. Other triggers include sleep deprivation, hormonal fluctuations linked to the menstrual cycle, travel, motion sickness, or acute infections.

Adult CVS is associated with several conditions, particularly mood disorders, including anxiety, depression, and panic disorder. Patients may also experience migraines, seizure disorders, or autonomic imbalances, such as postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, which may indicate pathophysiological mechanisms and routes for management.

The American Neurogastroenterology and Motility Society recommends testing to rule out similar or overlapping conditions, such as Addison’s disease, hypothyroidism, and hepatic porphyria. Diagnostic workup should include blood work, urinalysis, and one-time esophagogastroduodenoscopy or upper gastrointestinal imaging. Repeated imaging and gastric emptying scans should be avoided.
 

 

 

Providing Treatment and Prevention

For treatment, knowing the CVS phase is “essential,” the authors wrote. For instance, during the prodromal phase, abortive therapies can halt the transition to the emetic phase, and earlier intervention is associated with a higher probability of stopping an episode. The authors recommend intranasal sumatriptan, ondansetron, antihistamines, and sedatives.

During the emetic phase, supportive therapy can help terminate the episode. This may include continuing the abortive regimen and going to the emergency department for hydration and antiemetic medications. Patients may also find relief in a quiet, darker room in the emergency department, along with IV benzodiazepines, with the goal of inducing sedation.

During the recovery phase, patients should rest and focus on rehydration and nutrition to return to the well phase.

During the well or inter-episodic phase, patients can follow lifestyle measures to identify and avoid triggers, such as taking prophylactic medication (tricyclic antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and neurokinin-1 receptor antagonists such as aprepitant), reducing stress, and implementing a good sleep routine.

As part of patient education, clinicians can discuss the four phases and rehearse the actions to take to prevent or stop an episode.

“CVS has a significant impact on patients, families, and the healthcare system. The unpredictable and disruptive nature of episodes can result in reduced health-related quality of life, job loss precipitated by work absenteeism, and even divorce,” said Rosita Frazier, MD, a gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale who specializes in DGBI and CVS. Dr. Frazier, who wasn’t involved with the clinical practice update, has previously written about CVS diagnosis and management.

Dr. Rosita Frazier, gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale
Mayo Clinic Arizona
Dr. Rosita Frazier
Patients with CVS often report negative interactions with physicians, particularly in the emergency department, where they may request specific treatments based on past experiences but are labeled as “drug seeking” and denied standard medical treatment, she said.

“Providing an individualized care plan for all patients could potentially address this problem and improve the physician-patient interaction,” she said. “Educational efforts to raise awareness among the medical community and increase both patient and provider engagement can optimize outcomes and are needed to address this critical problem.”

The authors received no specific funding for this update. Dr. Levinthal is a consultant for Takeda Pharmaceuticals and Mahana. Dr. Frazier reported no relevant financial disclosures.

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Esophageal Cancer Risk Unchanged After Helicobacter Eradication

We Need to Personalize Foregut Cancer Screening Criteria
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Changed
Mon, 07/15/2024 - 12:54
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Esophageal Cancer Risk Unchanged After Helicobacter Eradication

Decreased prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection is not associated with an increased rate of esophageal cancer, based on a multinational cohort study.

This finding suggests that eradication of H pylori is safe with regard to esophageal cancer risk, and eradication campaigns are not contributing to the rising incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) over the past four decades, reported lead author Anna-Klara Wiklund, MD, of Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and colleagues.“The decreased risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma seen in individuals with H pylori infection is probably explained by the H pylori–induced gastric atrophy, which reduces gastric acid production and thus acidic gastroesophageal reflux, the main risk factor for this tumor,” the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology. “It seems plausible that eradication of H pylori would increase the risk of EAC, although the answer to this question is unknown with the only study on the topic (from our group) having too few cases and too short follow-up.”

That study involved only 11 cases of EAC.

For the present study, Dr. Wiklund and colleagues aggregated data from all individuals who had undergone H pylori eradication in Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden from 1995 to 2019. The dataset comprised 661,987 such individuals with more than 5 million person-years after eradication therapy, including 550 cases of EAC. Median follow-up time was approximately 8 years, ranging from 1 to 24 years.

Analyzing these data revealed that standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of EAC was not increased after eradication therapy (0.89; 95% CI, 0.82-0.97). In fact, SIR decreased over time after eradication, reaching as low as 0.73 (95% CI, 0.61-0.86) during the follow-up period of 11-24 years. These findings were maintained regardless of age or sex, and within country-by-country analyses.

SIR for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, which was calculated for comparison, showed no association with eradication therapy (0.99; 95% CI, 0.89-1.11).

“This study found no evidence supporting the hypothesis of a gradually increasing risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma over time after H pylori eradication treatment,” the investigators wrote.

Other risks were detected, including an overall increased SIR of EAC observed among participants with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and those using long-term proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). These were expected, however, “considering the strong and well-established association with EAC.”

Dr. Wiklund and colleagues suggested that more studies are needed to confirm their findings, although the present data provide confidence that H pylori eradication does not raise risk of EAC.

“This is valuable knowledge when considering eradication treatment for individual patients and eradication programs in high-risk populations of gastric cancer,” they wrote. “The results should be generalizable to other high-income countries with low prevalence of H pylori and high incidence of EAC, but studies from other regions with different patterns of these conditions are warranted.”

They also called for more basic research to understand why eradicating H pylori does not lead to an increased risk of EAC.The study was supported by Sjoberg Foundation, Nordic Cancer Union, Stockholm County Council, Stockholm Cancer Society. Investigators disclosed no conflicts of interest.

Body

 

Understanding the demographic and biomarker risk predictors of esophageal cancer continues to be a research priority. Many esophageal cancer patients fall outside of current screening guidelines. Updated recommendations have suggested including high risk-women, driven by higher quality datasets, emerging biomarkers, and cost effective non-endoscopic screening devices.

In this article, Wiklund et al. challenge another dogma that Helicobacter pylori infection offers protection against esophageal cancer. More specifically that overtreatment of H pylori is associated with increased incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma. Their Nordic data set identified 550 cases of esophageal cancer in the 661,987 patients treated for H pylori from 1995–2018 who were followed >5 million person-years. Interestingly, standardized incidence ratio of esophageal adenocarcinoma decreased over time.

Dr. Fouad Otaki, Division of Gastroenterology &amp; Hepatology at Oregon Health &amp; Science University, Portland
Oregon Health &amp; Science University
Dr. Fouad Otaki


This large dataset continues to encourage us to treat H pylori in patients at risk of progressing to gastric cancer. This parallels a growing fund of literature encouraging us to move away from the linear pathophysiologic logic that eliminating H pylori-induced gastric atrophy provokes gastroesophageal reflux disease and esophageal cancer. Instead we should factor in other parameters, including the complex interaction between the esophageal microbiome and gastric H pylori. Some postulated mechanisms include an extension of the gastric inflammatory milieu into the esophagus, and potential crosstalk with the esophageal microbiome.

Such studies underscore the need to personalize both foregut cancer screening criteria and treatment of inflammatory conditions at a patient and population level, so that we can make meaningful impacts in disease prevalence and cancer survival.
 

Fouad Otaki, MD, is associate professor in the Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

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Body

 

Understanding the demographic and biomarker risk predictors of esophageal cancer continues to be a research priority. Many esophageal cancer patients fall outside of current screening guidelines. Updated recommendations have suggested including high risk-women, driven by higher quality datasets, emerging biomarkers, and cost effective non-endoscopic screening devices.

In this article, Wiklund et al. challenge another dogma that Helicobacter pylori infection offers protection against esophageal cancer. More specifically that overtreatment of H pylori is associated with increased incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma. Their Nordic data set identified 550 cases of esophageal cancer in the 661,987 patients treated for H pylori from 1995–2018 who were followed >5 million person-years. Interestingly, standardized incidence ratio of esophageal adenocarcinoma decreased over time.

Dr. Fouad Otaki, Division of Gastroenterology &amp; Hepatology at Oregon Health &amp; Science University, Portland
Oregon Health &amp; Science University
Dr. Fouad Otaki


This large dataset continues to encourage us to treat H pylori in patients at risk of progressing to gastric cancer. This parallels a growing fund of literature encouraging us to move away from the linear pathophysiologic logic that eliminating H pylori-induced gastric atrophy provokes gastroesophageal reflux disease and esophageal cancer. Instead we should factor in other parameters, including the complex interaction between the esophageal microbiome and gastric H pylori. Some postulated mechanisms include an extension of the gastric inflammatory milieu into the esophagus, and potential crosstalk with the esophageal microbiome.

Such studies underscore the need to personalize both foregut cancer screening criteria and treatment of inflammatory conditions at a patient and population level, so that we can make meaningful impacts in disease prevalence and cancer survival.
 

Fouad Otaki, MD, is associate professor in the Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

Body

 

Understanding the demographic and biomarker risk predictors of esophageal cancer continues to be a research priority. Many esophageal cancer patients fall outside of current screening guidelines. Updated recommendations have suggested including high risk-women, driven by higher quality datasets, emerging biomarkers, and cost effective non-endoscopic screening devices.

In this article, Wiklund et al. challenge another dogma that Helicobacter pylori infection offers protection against esophageal cancer. More specifically that overtreatment of H pylori is associated with increased incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma. Their Nordic data set identified 550 cases of esophageal cancer in the 661,987 patients treated for H pylori from 1995–2018 who were followed >5 million person-years. Interestingly, standardized incidence ratio of esophageal adenocarcinoma decreased over time.

Dr. Fouad Otaki, Division of Gastroenterology &amp; Hepatology at Oregon Health &amp; Science University, Portland
Oregon Health &amp; Science University
Dr. Fouad Otaki


This large dataset continues to encourage us to treat H pylori in patients at risk of progressing to gastric cancer. This parallels a growing fund of literature encouraging us to move away from the linear pathophysiologic logic that eliminating H pylori-induced gastric atrophy provokes gastroesophageal reflux disease and esophageal cancer. Instead we should factor in other parameters, including the complex interaction between the esophageal microbiome and gastric H pylori. Some postulated mechanisms include an extension of the gastric inflammatory milieu into the esophagus, and potential crosstalk with the esophageal microbiome.

Such studies underscore the need to personalize both foregut cancer screening criteria and treatment of inflammatory conditions at a patient and population level, so that we can make meaningful impacts in disease prevalence and cancer survival.
 

Fouad Otaki, MD, is associate professor in the Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

Title
We Need to Personalize Foregut Cancer Screening Criteria
We Need to Personalize Foregut Cancer Screening Criteria

Decreased prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection is not associated with an increased rate of esophageal cancer, based on a multinational cohort study.

This finding suggests that eradication of H pylori is safe with regard to esophageal cancer risk, and eradication campaigns are not contributing to the rising incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) over the past four decades, reported lead author Anna-Klara Wiklund, MD, of Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and colleagues.“The decreased risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma seen in individuals with H pylori infection is probably explained by the H pylori–induced gastric atrophy, which reduces gastric acid production and thus acidic gastroesophageal reflux, the main risk factor for this tumor,” the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology. “It seems plausible that eradication of H pylori would increase the risk of EAC, although the answer to this question is unknown with the only study on the topic (from our group) having too few cases and too short follow-up.”

That study involved only 11 cases of EAC.

For the present study, Dr. Wiklund and colleagues aggregated data from all individuals who had undergone H pylori eradication in Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden from 1995 to 2019. The dataset comprised 661,987 such individuals with more than 5 million person-years after eradication therapy, including 550 cases of EAC. Median follow-up time was approximately 8 years, ranging from 1 to 24 years.

Analyzing these data revealed that standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of EAC was not increased after eradication therapy (0.89; 95% CI, 0.82-0.97). In fact, SIR decreased over time after eradication, reaching as low as 0.73 (95% CI, 0.61-0.86) during the follow-up period of 11-24 years. These findings were maintained regardless of age or sex, and within country-by-country analyses.

SIR for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, which was calculated for comparison, showed no association with eradication therapy (0.99; 95% CI, 0.89-1.11).

“This study found no evidence supporting the hypothesis of a gradually increasing risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma over time after H pylori eradication treatment,” the investigators wrote.

Other risks were detected, including an overall increased SIR of EAC observed among participants with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and those using long-term proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). These were expected, however, “considering the strong and well-established association with EAC.”

Dr. Wiklund and colleagues suggested that more studies are needed to confirm their findings, although the present data provide confidence that H pylori eradication does not raise risk of EAC.

“This is valuable knowledge when considering eradication treatment for individual patients and eradication programs in high-risk populations of gastric cancer,” they wrote. “The results should be generalizable to other high-income countries with low prevalence of H pylori and high incidence of EAC, but studies from other regions with different patterns of these conditions are warranted.”

They also called for more basic research to understand why eradicating H pylori does not lead to an increased risk of EAC.The study was supported by Sjoberg Foundation, Nordic Cancer Union, Stockholm County Council, Stockholm Cancer Society. Investigators disclosed no conflicts of interest.

Decreased prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection is not associated with an increased rate of esophageal cancer, based on a multinational cohort study.

This finding suggests that eradication of H pylori is safe with regard to esophageal cancer risk, and eradication campaigns are not contributing to the rising incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) over the past four decades, reported lead author Anna-Klara Wiklund, MD, of Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and colleagues.“The decreased risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma seen in individuals with H pylori infection is probably explained by the H pylori–induced gastric atrophy, which reduces gastric acid production and thus acidic gastroesophageal reflux, the main risk factor for this tumor,” the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology. “It seems plausible that eradication of H pylori would increase the risk of EAC, although the answer to this question is unknown with the only study on the topic (from our group) having too few cases and too short follow-up.”

That study involved only 11 cases of EAC.

For the present study, Dr. Wiklund and colleagues aggregated data from all individuals who had undergone H pylori eradication in Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden from 1995 to 2019. The dataset comprised 661,987 such individuals with more than 5 million person-years after eradication therapy, including 550 cases of EAC. Median follow-up time was approximately 8 years, ranging from 1 to 24 years.

Analyzing these data revealed that standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of EAC was not increased after eradication therapy (0.89; 95% CI, 0.82-0.97). In fact, SIR decreased over time after eradication, reaching as low as 0.73 (95% CI, 0.61-0.86) during the follow-up period of 11-24 years. These findings were maintained regardless of age or sex, and within country-by-country analyses.

SIR for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, which was calculated for comparison, showed no association with eradication therapy (0.99; 95% CI, 0.89-1.11).

“This study found no evidence supporting the hypothesis of a gradually increasing risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma over time after H pylori eradication treatment,” the investigators wrote.

Other risks were detected, including an overall increased SIR of EAC observed among participants with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and those using long-term proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). These were expected, however, “considering the strong and well-established association with EAC.”

Dr. Wiklund and colleagues suggested that more studies are needed to confirm their findings, although the present data provide confidence that H pylori eradication does not raise risk of EAC.

“This is valuable knowledge when considering eradication treatment for individual patients and eradication programs in high-risk populations of gastric cancer,” they wrote. “The results should be generalizable to other high-income countries with low prevalence of H pylori and high incidence of EAC, but studies from other regions with different patterns of these conditions are warranted.”

They also called for more basic research to understand why eradicating H pylori does not lead to an increased risk of EAC.The study was supported by Sjoberg Foundation, Nordic Cancer Union, Stockholm County Council, Stockholm Cancer Society. Investigators disclosed no conflicts of interest.

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Eosinophilic Esophagitis Often Persists Despite Treatment

Study Highlights Need For Systematic Care Models
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Thu, 07/11/2024 - 10:11

Many patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) continue to have substantial disease burden despite medical therapy, based on a recent retrospective study.

Challenging patient journeys were common across age groups, with a range of ongoing symptoms and histological abnormalities supporting high unmet need among patients with EoE, lead author Olulade Ayodele, MBBS, MPH, of Takeda Development Center Americas and colleagues reported.

“Recent studies have found that patients with EoE experience a complicated journey to diagnosis and a substantial disease burden, which requires significant healthcare resource utilization,” the investigators wrote in Gastro Hep Advances . “Reasons for this may include delays in diagnosis owing to nonspecific symptoms, adaptive behaviors, progression of silent disease, lack of adequate follow-up or referral, or suboptimal treatment after diagnosis.”Two medications are currently Food and Drug administration approved for EoE: dupilumab, a biologic for patients aged 1 year and older, and budesonide oral suspension, a topical corticosteroid for patients aged 11 years and older.

The investigators noted that “biologic therapies may not always be selected as first-line treatment, and are often associated with high costs”; however, the effects of real-world treatment decisions like these are poorly documented, prompting the present study.

The final dataset comprised 613 patients with newly diagnosed EoE treated in a rural integrated healthcare system, all of whom had at least 12 months of data before and after a predetermined index date. Individuals were stratified by age, including 182 children, 146 adolescents, 244 adults, and 41 older adults.

Signs and symptoms of EoE frequently worsened after the index date, including dysphagia (34.6% before, 49.9% after), abdominal pain (33.0% before, 48.1% after), and nausea/vomiting (20.1% before, 31.5% after).

At baseline, 80.5% of endoscopies were abnormal and 87.9% of patients had more than 15 eosinophils/high-power field. These parameters improved post index; however, 3 years later, 62.3% of patients still had abnormal endoscopic appearance and 51.2% had abnormal histologic activity.

Before and after index, the most prescribed treatments were corticosteroids (47.3% before, 87.9% after) and proton pump inhibitors (51.1% before, 96.1% after).

After index, 44.0% of patients discontinued their first-line treatment, and 13.9% experienced disease progression.

“We found that a substantial portion of patients with EoE received variable medical treatments, and did not report undergoing follow-up care, consulting with specialists, or routinely undergoing endoscopy with biopsy after diagnosis; the reasons for this are unknown, but experiences do not appear to be consistent with current guideline recommendations,” Dr. Ayodele and colleagues wrote.

They also noted substantial healthcare resource utilization; more than half of the patients visited emergency departments, and nearly one in five were admitted as inpatients.

“Our findings outline the persistent disease activity and difficult therapeutic journeys faced by patients with EoE irrespective of their age, as well as the substantial disease burden,” the investigators concluded. “These data highlight the potential unmet medical need of patients with EoE in the United States.”The study was funded by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, a member of the Takeda group of companies. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with RTI Health Solutions and Receptos/Celgene.

Body

 

In a large, retrospective, real-world cohort study, investigators examined the patient journey in 613 child, adolescent, and adult patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) via healthcare claims database and electronic medical record data. As we enter into an exciting era in novel biologic therapies in EoE, the article provides comprehensive and reliable information in several critical and actionable areas with respect to EoE diagnosis and management.

Anand Jain, MD, is with the division of digestive diseases at Emory University
Dr. Anand Jain
The study found that 51% of patients had histologic disease activity (defined as eosinophils ≥ 15/high-powered field) 3 years after index endoscopy despite high rates of appropriate first-line medical therapies (proton pump inhibitors in 51%, topical corticosteroids in 10%, combination therapy in 34%) and dietary elimination strategies (some form used in 58%). Nearly one in five patients had an all-cause inpatient hospitalization; and the mean number of emergency department visits was one visit per patient annually. The study also found that only 76% had a follow-up endoscopy after the index procedure, only 57% of patients had follow-up with a gastroenterologist, and 14% of patients saw no relevant EoE specialist.

The study highlights the heterogeneity of the patient experience in EoE and suggests that improvements in the reliability and precision of EoE care models will impact healthcare utilization. In particular, the findings support the need for structured and systematic mechanisms for appropriate follow-up after the index diagnosis and increased use and continued development of novel therapies.

Ravinder K. Mittal, MD, is with the division of digestive diseases at University of California, San Diego.
Dr. Mittal
Dr. Ravinder K. Mittal
In this era of precision medicine, the take home message from this study is that there is an opportunity to improvement outcomes in EoE by addressing the gap in appropriate medical contact in EoE. This could be achieved by developing systematic care models which address healthcare operational factors, physician tendencies, and patient attitudes.

Anand Jain, MD, is assistant professor in the Division of Digestive Diseases at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia. Ravinder Mittal, MD, AGAF, is professor in the Division of Gastroenterology at the University of California, San Diego, and staff physician at the San Diego VA Hospital. They report no conflicts of interest.

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In a large, retrospective, real-world cohort study, investigators examined the patient journey in 613 child, adolescent, and adult patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) via healthcare claims database and electronic medical record data. As we enter into an exciting era in novel biologic therapies in EoE, the article provides comprehensive and reliable information in several critical and actionable areas with respect to EoE diagnosis and management.

Anand Jain, MD, is with the division of digestive diseases at Emory University
Dr. Anand Jain
The study found that 51% of patients had histologic disease activity (defined as eosinophils ≥ 15/high-powered field) 3 years after index endoscopy despite high rates of appropriate first-line medical therapies (proton pump inhibitors in 51%, topical corticosteroids in 10%, combination therapy in 34%) and dietary elimination strategies (some form used in 58%). Nearly one in five patients had an all-cause inpatient hospitalization; and the mean number of emergency department visits was one visit per patient annually. The study also found that only 76% had a follow-up endoscopy after the index procedure, only 57% of patients had follow-up with a gastroenterologist, and 14% of patients saw no relevant EoE specialist.

The study highlights the heterogeneity of the patient experience in EoE and suggests that improvements in the reliability and precision of EoE care models will impact healthcare utilization. In particular, the findings support the need for structured and systematic mechanisms for appropriate follow-up after the index diagnosis and increased use and continued development of novel therapies.

Ravinder K. Mittal, MD, is with the division of digestive diseases at University of California, San Diego.
Dr. Mittal
Dr. Ravinder K. Mittal
In this era of precision medicine, the take home message from this study is that there is an opportunity to improvement outcomes in EoE by addressing the gap in appropriate medical contact in EoE. This could be achieved by developing systematic care models which address healthcare operational factors, physician tendencies, and patient attitudes.

Anand Jain, MD, is assistant professor in the Division of Digestive Diseases at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia. Ravinder Mittal, MD, AGAF, is professor in the Division of Gastroenterology at the University of California, San Diego, and staff physician at the San Diego VA Hospital. They report no conflicts of interest.

Body

 

In a large, retrospective, real-world cohort study, investigators examined the patient journey in 613 child, adolescent, and adult patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) via healthcare claims database and electronic medical record data. As we enter into an exciting era in novel biologic therapies in EoE, the article provides comprehensive and reliable information in several critical and actionable areas with respect to EoE diagnosis and management.

Anand Jain, MD, is with the division of digestive diseases at Emory University
Dr. Anand Jain
The study found that 51% of patients had histologic disease activity (defined as eosinophils ≥ 15/high-powered field) 3 years after index endoscopy despite high rates of appropriate first-line medical therapies (proton pump inhibitors in 51%, topical corticosteroids in 10%, combination therapy in 34%) and dietary elimination strategies (some form used in 58%). Nearly one in five patients had an all-cause inpatient hospitalization; and the mean number of emergency department visits was one visit per patient annually. The study also found that only 76% had a follow-up endoscopy after the index procedure, only 57% of patients had follow-up with a gastroenterologist, and 14% of patients saw no relevant EoE specialist.

The study highlights the heterogeneity of the patient experience in EoE and suggests that improvements in the reliability and precision of EoE care models will impact healthcare utilization. In particular, the findings support the need for structured and systematic mechanisms for appropriate follow-up after the index diagnosis and increased use and continued development of novel therapies.

Ravinder K. Mittal, MD, is with the division of digestive diseases at University of California, San Diego.
Dr. Mittal
Dr. Ravinder K. Mittal
In this era of precision medicine, the take home message from this study is that there is an opportunity to improvement outcomes in EoE by addressing the gap in appropriate medical contact in EoE. This could be achieved by developing systematic care models which address healthcare operational factors, physician tendencies, and patient attitudes.

Anand Jain, MD, is assistant professor in the Division of Digestive Diseases at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia. Ravinder Mittal, MD, AGAF, is professor in the Division of Gastroenterology at the University of California, San Diego, and staff physician at the San Diego VA Hospital. They report no conflicts of interest.

Title
Study Highlights Need For Systematic Care Models
Study Highlights Need For Systematic Care Models

Many patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) continue to have substantial disease burden despite medical therapy, based on a recent retrospective study.

Challenging patient journeys were common across age groups, with a range of ongoing symptoms and histological abnormalities supporting high unmet need among patients with EoE, lead author Olulade Ayodele, MBBS, MPH, of Takeda Development Center Americas and colleagues reported.

“Recent studies have found that patients with EoE experience a complicated journey to diagnosis and a substantial disease burden, which requires significant healthcare resource utilization,” the investigators wrote in Gastro Hep Advances . “Reasons for this may include delays in diagnosis owing to nonspecific symptoms, adaptive behaviors, progression of silent disease, lack of adequate follow-up or referral, or suboptimal treatment after diagnosis.”Two medications are currently Food and Drug administration approved for EoE: dupilumab, a biologic for patients aged 1 year and older, and budesonide oral suspension, a topical corticosteroid for patients aged 11 years and older.

The investigators noted that “biologic therapies may not always be selected as first-line treatment, and are often associated with high costs”; however, the effects of real-world treatment decisions like these are poorly documented, prompting the present study.

The final dataset comprised 613 patients with newly diagnosed EoE treated in a rural integrated healthcare system, all of whom had at least 12 months of data before and after a predetermined index date. Individuals were stratified by age, including 182 children, 146 adolescents, 244 adults, and 41 older adults.

Signs and symptoms of EoE frequently worsened after the index date, including dysphagia (34.6% before, 49.9% after), abdominal pain (33.0% before, 48.1% after), and nausea/vomiting (20.1% before, 31.5% after).

At baseline, 80.5% of endoscopies were abnormal and 87.9% of patients had more than 15 eosinophils/high-power field. These parameters improved post index; however, 3 years later, 62.3% of patients still had abnormal endoscopic appearance and 51.2% had abnormal histologic activity.

Before and after index, the most prescribed treatments were corticosteroids (47.3% before, 87.9% after) and proton pump inhibitors (51.1% before, 96.1% after).

After index, 44.0% of patients discontinued their first-line treatment, and 13.9% experienced disease progression.

“We found that a substantial portion of patients with EoE received variable medical treatments, and did not report undergoing follow-up care, consulting with specialists, or routinely undergoing endoscopy with biopsy after diagnosis; the reasons for this are unknown, but experiences do not appear to be consistent with current guideline recommendations,” Dr. Ayodele and colleagues wrote.

They also noted substantial healthcare resource utilization; more than half of the patients visited emergency departments, and nearly one in five were admitted as inpatients.

“Our findings outline the persistent disease activity and difficult therapeutic journeys faced by patients with EoE irrespective of their age, as well as the substantial disease burden,” the investigators concluded. “These data highlight the potential unmet medical need of patients with EoE in the United States.”The study was funded by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, a member of the Takeda group of companies. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with RTI Health Solutions and Receptos/Celgene.

Many patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) continue to have substantial disease burden despite medical therapy, based on a recent retrospective study.

Challenging patient journeys were common across age groups, with a range of ongoing symptoms and histological abnormalities supporting high unmet need among patients with EoE, lead author Olulade Ayodele, MBBS, MPH, of Takeda Development Center Americas and colleagues reported.

“Recent studies have found that patients with EoE experience a complicated journey to diagnosis and a substantial disease burden, which requires significant healthcare resource utilization,” the investigators wrote in Gastro Hep Advances . “Reasons for this may include delays in diagnosis owing to nonspecific symptoms, adaptive behaviors, progression of silent disease, lack of adequate follow-up or referral, or suboptimal treatment after diagnosis.”Two medications are currently Food and Drug administration approved for EoE: dupilumab, a biologic for patients aged 1 year and older, and budesonide oral suspension, a topical corticosteroid for patients aged 11 years and older.

The investigators noted that “biologic therapies may not always be selected as first-line treatment, and are often associated with high costs”; however, the effects of real-world treatment decisions like these are poorly documented, prompting the present study.

The final dataset comprised 613 patients with newly diagnosed EoE treated in a rural integrated healthcare system, all of whom had at least 12 months of data before and after a predetermined index date. Individuals were stratified by age, including 182 children, 146 adolescents, 244 adults, and 41 older adults.

Signs and symptoms of EoE frequently worsened after the index date, including dysphagia (34.6% before, 49.9% after), abdominal pain (33.0% before, 48.1% after), and nausea/vomiting (20.1% before, 31.5% after).

At baseline, 80.5% of endoscopies were abnormal and 87.9% of patients had more than 15 eosinophils/high-power field. These parameters improved post index; however, 3 years later, 62.3% of patients still had abnormal endoscopic appearance and 51.2% had abnormal histologic activity.

Before and after index, the most prescribed treatments were corticosteroids (47.3% before, 87.9% after) and proton pump inhibitors (51.1% before, 96.1% after).

After index, 44.0% of patients discontinued their first-line treatment, and 13.9% experienced disease progression.

“We found that a substantial portion of patients with EoE received variable medical treatments, and did not report undergoing follow-up care, consulting with specialists, or routinely undergoing endoscopy with biopsy after diagnosis; the reasons for this are unknown, but experiences do not appear to be consistent with current guideline recommendations,” Dr. Ayodele and colleagues wrote.

They also noted substantial healthcare resource utilization; more than half of the patients visited emergency departments, and nearly one in five were admitted as inpatients.

“Our findings outline the persistent disease activity and difficult therapeutic journeys faced by patients with EoE irrespective of their age, as well as the substantial disease burden,” the investigators concluded. “These data highlight the potential unmet medical need of patients with EoE in the United States.”The study was funded by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, a member of the Takeda group of companies. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with RTI Health Solutions and Receptos/Celgene.

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FIB-4 Index Misclassifies Many Patients

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The Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) index shows high discordance with liver stiffness measurement (LSM) via transient elastography, suggesting that many patients are misclassified, potentially impacting clinical decisions, according to investigators.

These findings call for a cautious interpretation of low-risk FIB-4 results among patients at greatest risk of misclassification, and/or use of alternative assessment strategies, reported Mazen Noureddin, MD, MHSc, of Houston Methodist Hospital, and coauthors.

Dr. Mazen Noureddin, Houston Methodist Hospital
Houston Methodist Hospital
Dr. Mazen Noureddin

“Currently, the AGA/AASLD Pathways recommends identifying patients at risk for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), then using sequential testing with FIB-4 followed by FibroScan to risk-stratify patients,” the investigators wrote in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Yet the performance of the FIB-4 index in this context remains unclear.

“Previous studies have shown FIB-4 to have low accuracy for screening liver fibrosis, especially among obese and diabetic patients,” the investigators wrote. “Thus, there is a concern that classifying patients with FIB-4 can lead to misclassification and missed diagnosis.”

To explore this concern, Dr. Noureddin and colleagues turned to data from the 2017-2020 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, including 5285 subjects at risk for MASLD. Exclusions were made for those with excessive alcohol intake or other liver diseases, resulting in a final cohort of 3741 individuals.

All subjects were classified as low-, indeterminate-, or high-risk for advanced liver fibrosis based on FIB-4 scores. These scores were then compared with liver stiffness measurements (LSM) obtained through transient elastography (FibroScan).

Out of 2776 subjects classified as low-risk by FIB-4, 277 (10%) were reclassified as higher risk by LSM, including 75 (2.7%) who were found to be at high risk. Out of 879 subjects with indeterminate FIB-4 scores, 37 (4.2%) were at high risk according to LSM. Finally, among the 86 subjects classified as high risk by FIB-4, 68 (79.1%) were reclassified as lower risk by LSM, including 54 (62.8%) who were deemed low risk.

Subjects misclassified as low risk by FIB-4 were typically older and had higher waist circumferences, body mass indices, glycohemoglobin A1c levels, fasting glucose levels, liver enzyme levels, diastolic blood pressures, controlled attenuation parameter scores, white blood cell counts, and alkaline phosphatase levels, but lower high-density lipoprotein and albumin levels (all P less than .05). They were also more likely to have prediabetes or diabetes.

“[I]t is important to acknowledge that 10% of the subjects were misclassified as low risk by FIB-4,” Dr. Noureddin and colleagues wrote, including 2.7% of patients who were actually high risk. “This misclassification of high-risk patients can lead to missed diagnoses, delaying crucial medical treatments or lifestyle interventions.”

They therefore suggested cautious interpretation of low-risk FIB-4 results among patients with factors predicting misclassification, or even use of alternative diagnostic strategies.

“Some possible alternatives to FIB-4 include new serum tests such NIS-2+, MASEF, SAFE score, and machine learning methods,” Dr. Noureddin and colleagues wrote. “However, additional confirmatory and cost-effective studies are required to validate the effectiveness of these tests, including studies conducted on the general population.”

The investigators disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Corcept, Galectin, and others.

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The Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) index shows high discordance with liver stiffness measurement (LSM) via transient elastography, suggesting that many patients are misclassified, potentially impacting clinical decisions, according to investigators.

These findings call for a cautious interpretation of low-risk FIB-4 results among patients at greatest risk of misclassification, and/or use of alternative assessment strategies, reported Mazen Noureddin, MD, MHSc, of Houston Methodist Hospital, and coauthors.

Dr. Mazen Noureddin, Houston Methodist Hospital
Houston Methodist Hospital
Dr. Mazen Noureddin

“Currently, the AGA/AASLD Pathways recommends identifying patients at risk for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), then using sequential testing with FIB-4 followed by FibroScan to risk-stratify patients,” the investigators wrote in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Yet the performance of the FIB-4 index in this context remains unclear.

“Previous studies have shown FIB-4 to have low accuracy for screening liver fibrosis, especially among obese and diabetic patients,” the investigators wrote. “Thus, there is a concern that classifying patients with FIB-4 can lead to misclassification and missed diagnosis.”

To explore this concern, Dr. Noureddin and colleagues turned to data from the 2017-2020 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, including 5285 subjects at risk for MASLD. Exclusions were made for those with excessive alcohol intake or other liver diseases, resulting in a final cohort of 3741 individuals.

All subjects were classified as low-, indeterminate-, or high-risk for advanced liver fibrosis based on FIB-4 scores. These scores were then compared with liver stiffness measurements (LSM) obtained through transient elastography (FibroScan).

Out of 2776 subjects classified as low-risk by FIB-4, 277 (10%) were reclassified as higher risk by LSM, including 75 (2.7%) who were found to be at high risk. Out of 879 subjects with indeterminate FIB-4 scores, 37 (4.2%) were at high risk according to LSM. Finally, among the 86 subjects classified as high risk by FIB-4, 68 (79.1%) were reclassified as lower risk by LSM, including 54 (62.8%) who were deemed low risk.

Subjects misclassified as low risk by FIB-4 were typically older and had higher waist circumferences, body mass indices, glycohemoglobin A1c levels, fasting glucose levels, liver enzyme levels, diastolic blood pressures, controlled attenuation parameter scores, white blood cell counts, and alkaline phosphatase levels, but lower high-density lipoprotein and albumin levels (all P less than .05). They were also more likely to have prediabetes or diabetes.

“[I]t is important to acknowledge that 10% of the subjects were misclassified as low risk by FIB-4,” Dr. Noureddin and colleagues wrote, including 2.7% of patients who were actually high risk. “This misclassification of high-risk patients can lead to missed diagnoses, delaying crucial medical treatments or lifestyle interventions.”

They therefore suggested cautious interpretation of low-risk FIB-4 results among patients with factors predicting misclassification, or even use of alternative diagnostic strategies.

“Some possible alternatives to FIB-4 include new serum tests such NIS-2+, MASEF, SAFE score, and machine learning methods,” Dr. Noureddin and colleagues wrote. “However, additional confirmatory and cost-effective studies are required to validate the effectiveness of these tests, including studies conducted on the general population.”

The investigators disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Corcept, Galectin, and others.

The Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) index shows high discordance with liver stiffness measurement (LSM) via transient elastography, suggesting that many patients are misclassified, potentially impacting clinical decisions, according to investigators.

These findings call for a cautious interpretation of low-risk FIB-4 results among patients at greatest risk of misclassification, and/or use of alternative assessment strategies, reported Mazen Noureddin, MD, MHSc, of Houston Methodist Hospital, and coauthors.

Dr. Mazen Noureddin, Houston Methodist Hospital
Houston Methodist Hospital
Dr. Mazen Noureddin

“Currently, the AGA/AASLD Pathways recommends identifying patients at risk for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), then using sequential testing with FIB-4 followed by FibroScan to risk-stratify patients,” the investigators wrote in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Yet the performance of the FIB-4 index in this context remains unclear.

“Previous studies have shown FIB-4 to have low accuracy for screening liver fibrosis, especially among obese and diabetic patients,” the investigators wrote. “Thus, there is a concern that classifying patients with FIB-4 can lead to misclassification and missed diagnosis.”

To explore this concern, Dr. Noureddin and colleagues turned to data from the 2017-2020 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, including 5285 subjects at risk for MASLD. Exclusions were made for those with excessive alcohol intake or other liver diseases, resulting in a final cohort of 3741 individuals.

All subjects were classified as low-, indeterminate-, or high-risk for advanced liver fibrosis based on FIB-4 scores. These scores were then compared with liver stiffness measurements (LSM) obtained through transient elastography (FibroScan).

Out of 2776 subjects classified as low-risk by FIB-4, 277 (10%) were reclassified as higher risk by LSM, including 75 (2.7%) who were found to be at high risk. Out of 879 subjects with indeterminate FIB-4 scores, 37 (4.2%) were at high risk according to LSM. Finally, among the 86 subjects classified as high risk by FIB-4, 68 (79.1%) were reclassified as lower risk by LSM, including 54 (62.8%) who were deemed low risk.

Subjects misclassified as low risk by FIB-4 were typically older and had higher waist circumferences, body mass indices, glycohemoglobin A1c levels, fasting glucose levels, liver enzyme levels, diastolic blood pressures, controlled attenuation parameter scores, white blood cell counts, and alkaline phosphatase levels, but lower high-density lipoprotein and albumin levels (all P less than .05). They were also more likely to have prediabetes or diabetes.

“[I]t is important to acknowledge that 10% of the subjects were misclassified as low risk by FIB-4,” Dr. Noureddin and colleagues wrote, including 2.7% of patients who were actually high risk. “This misclassification of high-risk patients can lead to missed diagnoses, delaying crucial medical treatments or lifestyle interventions.”

They therefore suggested cautious interpretation of low-risk FIB-4 results among patients with factors predicting misclassification, or even use of alternative diagnostic strategies.

“Some possible alternatives to FIB-4 include new serum tests such NIS-2+, MASEF, SAFE score, and machine learning methods,” Dr. Noureddin and colleagues wrote. “However, additional confirmatory and cost-effective studies are required to validate the effectiveness of these tests, including studies conducted on the general population.”

The investigators disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Corcept, Galectin, and others.

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Autonomous AI Outperforms Humans in Optical Diagnosis of Colorectal Polyps

‘Automatic’ CADx in Colonoscopy
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Autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) can achieve similar accuracy to AI-assisted humans (AI-H) in the optical diagnosis of diminutive colorectal polyps, while providing greater alignment with pathology-based surveillance intervals, based on a randomized controlled trial.

These findings suggest that autonomous AI may one day replace histologic assessment of diminutive polyps, reported lead author Roupen Djinbachian, MD, of the Montreal University Hospital Research Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and colleagues.Optical diagnosis of diminutive colorectal polyps has been proposed as a cost-effective alternative to histologic diagnosis, but its implementation in general clinical practice has been hindered by endoscopists’ concerns about incorrect diagnoses, the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology.“AI-based systems (CADx) have been proposed as a solution to these barriers to implementation, with studies showing high adherence to Preservation and Incorporation of Valuable Endoscopic Innovations (PIVI) thresholds when using AI-H,” they wrote. “However, the efficacy and safety of autonomous AI-based diagnostic platforms have not yet been evaluated.”

To address this knowledge gap, Dr. Djinbachian and colleagues conducted a randomized controlled noninferiority trial involving 467 patients, all of whom underwent elective colonoscopies at a single academic institution.

Participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups. The first group received an optical diagnosis of diminutive (1-5 mm) colorectal polyps using an autonomous AI-based CADx system without any human input. The second group had diagnoses performed by endoscopists who used AI-H to make their optical diagnoses.

The primary outcome was the accuracy of optical diagnosis compared with the gold standard of histologic evaluation. Secondarily, the investigators explored associations between pathology-based surveillance intervals and various measures of accuracy, including sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV).

The results showed that the accuracy of optical diagnosis for diminutive polyps was similar between the two groups, supporting noninferiority. Autonomous AI achieved an accuracy rate of 77.2%, while the AI-H group had an accuracy of 72.1%, which was not statistically significant (P = .86).

But when it came to pathology-based surveillance intervals, autonomous AI showed a clear advantage; the autonomous AI system achieved a 91.5% agreement rate, compared with 82.1% for the AI-H group (P = .016).

“These findings indicate that autonomous AI not only matches but also surpasses AI-H in accuracy for determining surveillance intervals,” the investigators wrote, noting that this finding highlights the “complexities of human interaction with AI modules where human intervention could lead to worse outcomes.”

Further analysis revealed that the sensitivity of autonomous AI for identifying adenomas was 84.8%, slightly higher than the 83.6% sensitivity of the AI-H group. Specificity was 64.4% for autonomous AI vs 63.8% for AI-H. While PPV was higher in the autonomous AI group (85.6%), compared with the AI-H group (78.6%), NPV was lower for autonomous AI than AI-H (63.0% vs 71.0%).

Dr. Djinbachian and colleagues suggested that future research should focus on larger, multicenter trials to validate these findings and further explore the integration of autonomous AI systems in clinical practice. They also noted that improving AI algorithms to accurately diagnose sessile serrated lesions could enhance the overall effectiveness of AI-based optical diagnosis.

“The performance of autonomous AI in accurately diagnosing diminutive polyps and determining appropriate surveillance intervals suggests that it could play a crucial role in streamlining colorectal cancer screening processes, reducing the burden on pathologists, and potentially lowering healthcare costs,” the investigators concluded.The study was supported by Fujifilm, which had no role in the study design or data analysis. Dr. von Renteln reported additional research funding from Vantage and Fujifilm.

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In the era of computer vision for endoscopy and colonoscopy, current paradigms rely on AI as a co-pilot or second observer, with the physician serving as the final arbiter in procedure-related decision-making. This study by Djinbachian and Haumesser et al brings up the interesting wrinkle of autonomous AI as a potentially superior (or noninferior) option in narrow, task-specific use cases.

In this study, human input from the endoscopist after CADx diagnosis led to lower agreement between the AI-predicted diagnosis and corresponding surveillance intervals; human oversight more often incorrectly changed the resultant diagnosis and led to shorter than recommended surveillance intervals.

This study offers a small but very important update to the growing body of literature on CADx in colonoscopy. So far, prospective validation of CADx compared with the human eye for in-situ diagnosis of polyps has provided mixed results. This study is one of the first to examine the potential role of “automatic” CADx without additional human input and sheds light on the importance of the AI-human hybrid in medical care. How do the ways in which humans interact with the user interface and output of AI lead to changes in outcome? How can we optimize the AI-human interaction in order to provide optimal results?

Dr. Jeremy R. Glissen Brown, Department of Internal Medicine and Division of Gastroenterology at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
Duke University Medical Center
Dr. Jeremy R. Glissen Brown
In this case, the suggestion is that less is more when it comes to human interference with optical diagnosis, but further research is needed on how to best optimize this important relationship as well as how AI might (or might not) support diagnose-and-leave and diagnose-and-discard strategies in the United States and worldwide.

Jeremy R. Glissen Brown is an assistant professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and Division of Gastroenterology at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. He has served as a consultant for Medtronic and Olympus, and on the advisory board for Odin Vision.

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In the era of computer vision for endoscopy and colonoscopy, current paradigms rely on AI as a co-pilot or second observer, with the physician serving as the final arbiter in procedure-related decision-making. This study by Djinbachian and Haumesser et al brings up the interesting wrinkle of autonomous AI as a potentially superior (or noninferior) option in narrow, task-specific use cases.

In this study, human input from the endoscopist after CADx diagnosis led to lower agreement between the AI-predicted diagnosis and corresponding surveillance intervals; human oversight more often incorrectly changed the resultant diagnosis and led to shorter than recommended surveillance intervals.

This study offers a small but very important update to the growing body of literature on CADx in colonoscopy. So far, prospective validation of CADx compared with the human eye for in-situ diagnosis of polyps has provided mixed results. This study is one of the first to examine the potential role of “automatic” CADx without additional human input and sheds light on the importance of the AI-human hybrid in medical care. How do the ways in which humans interact with the user interface and output of AI lead to changes in outcome? How can we optimize the AI-human interaction in order to provide optimal results?

Dr. Jeremy R. Glissen Brown, Department of Internal Medicine and Division of Gastroenterology at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
Duke University Medical Center
Dr. Jeremy R. Glissen Brown
In this case, the suggestion is that less is more when it comes to human interference with optical diagnosis, but further research is needed on how to best optimize this important relationship as well as how AI might (or might not) support diagnose-and-leave and diagnose-and-discard strategies in the United States and worldwide.

Jeremy R. Glissen Brown is an assistant professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and Division of Gastroenterology at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. He has served as a consultant for Medtronic and Olympus, and on the advisory board for Odin Vision.

Body

 

In the era of computer vision for endoscopy and colonoscopy, current paradigms rely on AI as a co-pilot or second observer, with the physician serving as the final arbiter in procedure-related decision-making. This study by Djinbachian and Haumesser et al brings up the interesting wrinkle of autonomous AI as a potentially superior (or noninferior) option in narrow, task-specific use cases.

In this study, human input from the endoscopist after CADx diagnosis led to lower agreement between the AI-predicted diagnosis and corresponding surveillance intervals; human oversight more often incorrectly changed the resultant diagnosis and led to shorter than recommended surveillance intervals.

This study offers a small but very important update to the growing body of literature on CADx in colonoscopy. So far, prospective validation of CADx compared with the human eye for in-situ diagnosis of polyps has provided mixed results. This study is one of the first to examine the potential role of “automatic” CADx without additional human input and sheds light on the importance of the AI-human hybrid in medical care. How do the ways in which humans interact with the user interface and output of AI lead to changes in outcome? How can we optimize the AI-human interaction in order to provide optimal results?

Dr. Jeremy R. Glissen Brown, Department of Internal Medicine and Division of Gastroenterology at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
Duke University Medical Center
Dr. Jeremy R. Glissen Brown
In this case, the suggestion is that less is more when it comes to human interference with optical diagnosis, but further research is needed on how to best optimize this important relationship as well as how AI might (or might not) support diagnose-and-leave and diagnose-and-discard strategies in the United States and worldwide.

Jeremy R. Glissen Brown is an assistant professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and Division of Gastroenterology at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. He has served as a consultant for Medtronic and Olympus, and on the advisory board for Odin Vision.

Title
‘Automatic’ CADx in Colonoscopy
‘Automatic’ CADx in Colonoscopy

Autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) can achieve similar accuracy to AI-assisted humans (AI-H) in the optical diagnosis of diminutive colorectal polyps, while providing greater alignment with pathology-based surveillance intervals, based on a randomized controlled trial.

These findings suggest that autonomous AI may one day replace histologic assessment of diminutive polyps, reported lead author Roupen Djinbachian, MD, of the Montreal University Hospital Research Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and colleagues.Optical diagnosis of diminutive colorectal polyps has been proposed as a cost-effective alternative to histologic diagnosis, but its implementation in general clinical practice has been hindered by endoscopists’ concerns about incorrect diagnoses, the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology.“AI-based systems (CADx) have been proposed as a solution to these barriers to implementation, with studies showing high adherence to Preservation and Incorporation of Valuable Endoscopic Innovations (PIVI) thresholds when using AI-H,” they wrote. “However, the efficacy and safety of autonomous AI-based diagnostic platforms have not yet been evaluated.”

To address this knowledge gap, Dr. Djinbachian and colleagues conducted a randomized controlled noninferiority trial involving 467 patients, all of whom underwent elective colonoscopies at a single academic institution.

Participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups. The first group received an optical diagnosis of diminutive (1-5 mm) colorectal polyps using an autonomous AI-based CADx system without any human input. The second group had diagnoses performed by endoscopists who used AI-H to make their optical diagnoses.

The primary outcome was the accuracy of optical diagnosis compared with the gold standard of histologic evaluation. Secondarily, the investigators explored associations between pathology-based surveillance intervals and various measures of accuracy, including sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV).

The results showed that the accuracy of optical diagnosis for diminutive polyps was similar between the two groups, supporting noninferiority. Autonomous AI achieved an accuracy rate of 77.2%, while the AI-H group had an accuracy of 72.1%, which was not statistically significant (P = .86).

But when it came to pathology-based surveillance intervals, autonomous AI showed a clear advantage; the autonomous AI system achieved a 91.5% agreement rate, compared with 82.1% for the AI-H group (P = .016).

“These findings indicate that autonomous AI not only matches but also surpasses AI-H in accuracy for determining surveillance intervals,” the investigators wrote, noting that this finding highlights the “complexities of human interaction with AI modules where human intervention could lead to worse outcomes.”

Further analysis revealed that the sensitivity of autonomous AI for identifying adenomas was 84.8%, slightly higher than the 83.6% sensitivity of the AI-H group. Specificity was 64.4% for autonomous AI vs 63.8% for AI-H. While PPV was higher in the autonomous AI group (85.6%), compared with the AI-H group (78.6%), NPV was lower for autonomous AI than AI-H (63.0% vs 71.0%).

Dr. Djinbachian and colleagues suggested that future research should focus on larger, multicenter trials to validate these findings and further explore the integration of autonomous AI systems in clinical practice. They also noted that improving AI algorithms to accurately diagnose sessile serrated lesions could enhance the overall effectiveness of AI-based optical diagnosis.

“The performance of autonomous AI in accurately diagnosing diminutive polyps and determining appropriate surveillance intervals suggests that it could play a crucial role in streamlining colorectal cancer screening processes, reducing the burden on pathologists, and potentially lowering healthcare costs,” the investigators concluded.The study was supported by Fujifilm, which had no role in the study design or data analysis. Dr. von Renteln reported additional research funding from Vantage and Fujifilm.

Autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) can achieve similar accuracy to AI-assisted humans (AI-H) in the optical diagnosis of diminutive colorectal polyps, while providing greater alignment with pathology-based surveillance intervals, based on a randomized controlled trial.

These findings suggest that autonomous AI may one day replace histologic assessment of diminutive polyps, reported lead author Roupen Djinbachian, MD, of the Montreal University Hospital Research Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and colleagues.Optical diagnosis of diminutive colorectal polyps has been proposed as a cost-effective alternative to histologic diagnosis, but its implementation in general clinical practice has been hindered by endoscopists’ concerns about incorrect diagnoses, the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology.“AI-based systems (CADx) have been proposed as a solution to these barriers to implementation, with studies showing high adherence to Preservation and Incorporation of Valuable Endoscopic Innovations (PIVI) thresholds when using AI-H,” they wrote. “However, the efficacy and safety of autonomous AI-based diagnostic platforms have not yet been evaluated.”

To address this knowledge gap, Dr. Djinbachian and colleagues conducted a randomized controlled noninferiority trial involving 467 patients, all of whom underwent elective colonoscopies at a single academic institution.

Participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups. The first group received an optical diagnosis of diminutive (1-5 mm) colorectal polyps using an autonomous AI-based CADx system without any human input. The second group had diagnoses performed by endoscopists who used AI-H to make their optical diagnoses.

The primary outcome was the accuracy of optical diagnosis compared with the gold standard of histologic evaluation. Secondarily, the investigators explored associations between pathology-based surveillance intervals and various measures of accuracy, including sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV).

The results showed that the accuracy of optical diagnosis for diminutive polyps was similar between the two groups, supporting noninferiority. Autonomous AI achieved an accuracy rate of 77.2%, while the AI-H group had an accuracy of 72.1%, which was not statistically significant (P = .86).

But when it came to pathology-based surveillance intervals, autonomous AI showed a clear advantage; the autonomous AI system achieved a 91.5% agreement rate, compared with 82.1% for the AI-H group (P = .016).

“These findings indicate that autonomous AI not only matches but also surpasses AI-H in accuracy for determining surveillance intervals,” the investigators wrote, noting that this finding highlights the “complexities of human interaction with AI modules where human intervention could lead to worse outcomes.”

Further analysis revealed that the sensitivity of autonomous AI for identifying adenomas was 84.8%, slightly higher than the 83.6% sensitivity of the AI-H group. Specificity was 64.4% for autonomous AI vs 63.8% for AI-H. While PPV was higher in the autonomous AI group (85.6%), compared with the AI-H group (78.6%), NPV was lower for autonomous AI than AI-H (63.0% vs 71.0%).

Dr. Djinbachian and colleagues suggested that future research should focus on larger, multicenter trials to validate these findings and further explore the integration of autonomous AI systems in clinical practice. They also noted that improving AI algorithms to accurately diagnose sessile serrated lesions could enhance the overall effectiveness of AI-based optical diagnosis.

“The performance of autonomous AI in accurately diagnosing diminutive polyps and determining appropriate surveillance intervals suggests that it could play a crucial role in streamlining colorectal cancer screening processes, reducing the burden on pathologists, and potentially lowering healthcare costs,” the investigators concluded.The study was supported by Fujifilm, which had no role in the study design or data analysis. Dr. von Renteln reported additional research funding from Vantage and Fujifilm.

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Targeting Enteroendocrine Cells Could Hold Promise for IBD

Valuable Insights into Small Intestine Dysmotility
Article Type
Changed
Tue, 06/11/2024 - 10:48

Colitis-induced small intestinal hypomotility is closely linked to the loss of enteroendocrine cells (EECs) in mice, revealing a potential therapeutic strategy for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), according to investigators.

These findings suggest that restoring EEC function could alleviate some of the more general abdominal symptoms associated with IBD, reported lead author Zachariah Raouf, MD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues.

“The symptoms experienced by patients with IBD, especially ulcerative colitis, may include those that are colonic in nature, such as bloody stools, abdominal pain, and weight loss, as well as those that are more general in nature, such as severe nausea and abdominal bloating,” the investigators wrote in Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology . “Although the first set of symptoms may be attributable to the effects of colonic inflammation itself, those that are more vague seem to overlap with the symptoms that patients with small intestinal dysmotility experience, such as occur in response to medications, or diabetes.”

Supporting this notion, several previous studies have reported the onset of intestinal dysmotility in experimental models of colitis, which is believed to be caused by impaired enteric nervous system function. But the precise mechanisms behind the impaired intestinal motility observed in colitis patients remain unclear.

To learn more, Dr. Raouf and colleagues conducted experiments involving three groups of mice: wild-type mice, mice genetically engineered to overexpress EECs, and mice lacking EECs.

To induce colitis, the mice were administered dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) in drinking water at concentrations of 2.5% or 5% for 7 days. Small intestinal motility was evaluated by measuring the transit of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-dextran. Immunohistochemical analyses were conducted to assess EEC number and differentiation, while quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction was used to examine the expression of genes related to serotonin synthesis and transport.

The researchers examined colon length and signs of colonic inflammation, monitored weight loss, and measured the expression of proinflammatory cytokines. Histological analyses of colon and small intestine tissues were performed to further understand the effects of colitis. The presence and number of EEC cells was evaluated using chromogranin A (ChgA) staining, while apoptosis in EECs was measured via TUNEL staining. The expression of serotonin-related genes was also assessed.

These experiments revealed that DSS-induced colitis led to significant small-bowel hypomotility and a reduction in EEC density. Of note, genetic overexpression of EECs or treatment with prucalopride, a 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 4 agonist, improved small intestinal motility.

“It is noteworthy that there were no significant changes in the density of other intestinal epithelial cells, or in other cell types that are linked to motility, such as enteric glia and neurons, suggesting the specificity of the effect,” the investigators wrote. “Importantly, treatment with a serotonin agonist ameliorated the colitis-induced, small-bowel hypomotility and attenuated the severity of colitis, providing potential clinical relevance of the current findings. Taken together, these results identify mechanisms to explain the intestinal hypomotility observed in the setting of colitis.”Dr. Raouf and colleagues called for human clinical trials to their findings. Specifically, they suggested exploring therapies targeting enteroendocrine cells or serotonin pathways and examining the role of different EEC types in gut motility during inflammation. The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health. The investigators disclosed no conflicts of interest.

Body

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) typically manifests with colonic symptoms but is also associated with intestinal inflammation and dysmotility of the small intestine. Clinical research debates whether IBD causes small intestine hypermotility or hypomotility, but these motility dysfunctions are often attributed to alterations of the gut’s intrinsic nervous system.

Dr. Raouf and colleagues focus on the role of enteroendocrine cells, an epithelial cell subtype with neuron-like features that secrete serotonin, one of the most important regulators of intestinal motility. Their population is reduced in colitis, and the subsequent alteration of serotonin signaling induces small intestine dysmotility. The observed loss of enteroendocrine cells in the small bowel may result from low-grade local inflammation increasing enteroendocrine cell apoptosis, or impaired gene expression in their differentiation pathways. However, more research is required to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of this loss.

Dr. Jacques A. Gonzales, postdoctoral fellow in the Gulbransen laboratory at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Dr. Gonzales
Dr. Jacques A. Gonzales
Nevertheless, their findings provide valuable insights into small intestine dysmotility associated with IBD pathologies and suggest a therapeutic approach based on a pharmacologic serotonin agonist. Treatment with prucalopride, a serotonin type 4 receptor agonist already used in clinics with minimal adverse effects, restores small intestine motility and offers therapeutic benefits. Although the results are promising in DSS models of colitis, the observed improvement in small intestinal motility needs to be confirmed in IBD patients.

This study enhances our understanding of the small intestine dysfunction associated with colitis and raises the exciting possibility of enteroendocrine cell-based therapeutic approaches in IBD.

Jacques A. Gonzales, PhD, is a postdoctoral fellow in the Gulbransen laboratory at Michigan State University, East Lansing. He has no conflicts of interest.

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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) typically manifests with colonic symptoms but is also associated with intestinal inflammation and dysmotility of the small intestine. Clinical research debates whether IBD causes small intestine hypermotility or hypomotility, but these motility dysfunctions are often attributed to alterations of the gut’s intrinsic nervous system.

Dr. Raouf and colleagues focus on the role of enteroendocrine cells, an epithelial cell subtype with neuron-like features that secrete serotonin, one of the most important regulators of intestinal motility. Their population is reduced in colitis, and the subsequent alteration of serotonin signaling induces small intestine dysmotility. The observed loss of enteroendocrine cells in the small bowel may result from low-grade local inflammation increasing enteroendocrine cell apoptosis, or impaired gene expression in their differentiation pathways. However, more research is required to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of this loss.

Dr. Jacques A. Gonzales, postdoctoral fellow in the Gulbransen laboratory at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Dr. Gonzales
Dr. Jacques A. Gonzales
Nevertheless, their findings provide valuable insights into small intestine dysmotility associated with IBD pathologies and suggest a therapeutic approach based on a pharmacologic serotonin agonist. Treatment with prucalopride, a serotonin type 4 receptor agonist already used in clinics with minimal adverse effects, restores small intestine motility and offers therapeutic benefits. Although the results are promising in DSS models of colitis, the observed improvement in small intestinal motility needs to be confirmed in IBD patients.

This study enhances our understanding of the small intestine dysfunction associated with colitis and raises the exciting possibility of enteroendocrine cell-based therapeutic approaches in IBD.

Jacques A. Gonzales, PhD, is a postdoctoral fellow in the Gulbransen laboratory at Michigan State University, East Lansing. He has no conflicts of interest.

Body

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) typically manifests with colonic symptoms but is also associated with intestinal inflammation and dysmotility of the small intestine. Clinical research debates whether IBD causes small intestine hypermotility or hypomotility, but these motility dysfunctions are often attributed to alterations of the gut’s intrinsic nervous system.

Dr. Raouf and colleagues focus on the role of enteroendocrine cells, an epithelial cell subtype with neuron-like features that secrete serotonin, one of the most important regulators of intestinal motility. Their population is reduced in colitis, and the subsequent alteration of serotonin signaling induces small intestine dysmotility. The observed loss of enteroendocrine cells in the small bowel may result from low-grade local inflammation increasing enteroendocrine cell apoptosis, or impaired gene expression in their differentiation pathways. However, more research is required to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of this loss.

Dr. Jacques A. Gonzales, postdoctoral fellow in the Gulbransen laboratory at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Dr. Gonzales
Dr. Jacques A. Gonzales
Nevertheless, their findings provide valuable insights into small intestine dysmotility associated with IBD pathologies and suggest a therapeutic approach based on a pharmacologic serotonin agonist. Treatment with prucalopride, a serotonin type 4 receptor agonist already used in clinics with minimal adverse effects, restores small intestine motility and offers therapeutic benefits. Although the results are promising in DSS models of colitis, the observed improvement in small intestinal motility needs to be confirmed in IBD patients.

This study enhances our understanding of the small intestine dysfunction associated with colitis and raises the exciting possibility of enteroendocrine cell-based therapeutic approaches in IBD.

Jacques A. Gonzales, PhD, is a postdoctoral fellow in the Gulbransen laboratory at Michigan State University, East Lansing. He has no conflicts of interest.

Title
Valuable Insights into Small Intestine Dysmotility
Valuable Insights into Small Intestine Dysmotility

Colitis-induced small intestinal hypomotility is closely linked to the loss of enteroendocrine cells (EECs) in mice, revealing a potential therapeutic strategy for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), according to investigators.

These findings suggest that restoring EEC function could alleviate some of the more general abdominal symptoms associated with IBD, reported lead author Zachariah Raouf, MD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues.

“The symptoms experienced by patients with IBD, especially ulcerative colitis, may include those that are colonic in nature, such as bloody stools, abdominal pain, and weight loss, as well as those that are more general in nature, such as severe nausea and abdominal bloating,” the investigators wrote in Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology . “Although the first set of symptoms may be attributable to the effects of colonic inflammation itself, those that are more vague seem to overlap with the symptoms that patients with small intestinal dysmotility experience, such as occur in response to medications, or diabetes.”

Supporting this notion, several previous studies have reported the onset of intestinal dysmotility in experimental models of colitis, which is believed to be caused by impaired enteric nervous system function. But the precise mechanisms behind the impaired intestinal motility observed in colitis patients remain unclear.

To learn more, Dr. Raouf and colleagues conducted experiments involving three groups of mice: wild-type mice, mice genetically engineered to overexpress EECs, and mice lacking EECs.

To induce colitis, the mice were administered dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) in drinking water at concentrations of 2.5% or 5% for 7 days. Small intestinal motility was evaluated by measuring the transit of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-dextran. Immunohistochemical analyses were conducted to assess EEC number and differentiation, while quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction was used to examine the expression of genes related to serotonin synthesis and transport.

The researchers examined colon length and signs of colonic inflammation, monitored weight loss, and measured the expression of proinflammatory cytokines. Histological analyses of colon and small intestine tissues were performed to further understand the effects of colitis. The presence and number of EEC cells was evaluated using chromogranin A (ChgA) staining, while apoptosis in EECs was measured via TUNEL staining. The expression of serotonin-related genes was also assessed.

These experiments revealed that DSS-induced colitis led to significant small-bowel hypomotility and a reduction in EEC density. Of note, genetic overexpression of EECs or treatment with prucalopride, a 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 4 agonist, improved small intestinal motility.

“It is noteworthy that there were no significant changes in the density of other intestinal epithelial cells, or in other cell types that are linked to motility, such as enteric glia and neurons, suggesting the specificity of the effect,” the investigators wrote. “Importantly, treatment with a serotonin agonist ameliorated the colitis-induced, small-bowel hypomotility and attenuated the severity of colitis, providing potential clinical relevance of the current findings. Taken together, these results identify mechanisms to explain the intestinal hypomotility observed in the setting of colitis.”Dr. Raouf and colleagues called for human clinical trials to their findings. Specifically, they suggested exploring therapies targeting enteroendocrine cells or serotonin pathways and examining the role of different EEC types in gut motility during inflammation. The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health. The investigators disclosed no conflicts of interest.

Colitis-induced small intestinal hypomotility is closely linked to the loss of enteroendocrine cells (EECs) in mice, revealing a potential therapeutic strategy for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), according to investigators.

These findings suggest that restoring EEC function could alleviate some of the more general abdominal symptoms associated with IBD, reported lead author Zachariah Raouf, MD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues.

“The symptoms experienced by patients with IBD, especially ulcerative colitis, may include those that are colonic in nature, such as bloody stools, abdominal pain, and weight loss, as well as those that are more general in nature, such as severe nausea and abdominal bloating,” the investigators wrote in Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology . “Although the first set of symptoms may be attributable to the effects of colonic inflammation itself, those that are more vague seem to overlap with the symptoms that patients with small intestinal dysmotility experience, such as occur in response to medications, or diabetes.”

Supporting this notion, several previous studies have reported the onset of intestinal dysmotility in experimental models of colitis, which is believed to be caused by impaired enteric nervous system function. But the precise mechanisms behind the impaired intestinal motility observed in colitis patients remain unclear.

To learn more, Dr. Raouf and colleagues conducted experiments involving three groups of mice: wild-type mice, mice genetically engineered to overexpress EECs, and mice lacking EECs.

To induce colitis, the mice were administered dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) in drinking water at concentrations of 2.5% or 5% for 7 days. Small intestinal motility was evaluated by measuring the transit of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-dextran. Immunohistochemical analyses were conducted to assess EEC number and differentiation, while quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction was used to examine the expression of genes related to serotonin synthesis and transport.

The researchers examined colon length and signs of colonic inflammation, monitored weight loss, and measured the expression of proinflammatory cytokines. Histological analyses of colon and small intestine tissues were performed to further understand the effects of colitis. The presence and number of EEC cells was evaluated using chromogranin A (ChgA) staining, while apoptosis in EECs was measured via TUNEL staining. The expression of serotonin-related genes was also assessed.

These experiments revealed that DSS-induced colitis led to significant small-bowel hypomotility and a reduction in EEC density. Of note, genetic overexpression of EECs or treatment with prucalopride, a 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 4 agonist, improved small intestinal motility.

“It is noteworthy that there were no significant changes in the density of other intestinal epithelial cells, or in other cell types that are linked to motility, such as enteric glia and neurons, suggesting the specificity of the effect,” the investigators wrote. “Importantly, treatment with a serotonin agonist ameliorated the colitis-induced, small-bowel hypomotility and attenuated the severity of colitis, providing potential clinical relevance of the current findings. Taken together, these results identify mechanisms to explain the intestinal hypomotility observed in the setting of colitis.”Dr. Raouf and colleagues called for human clinical trials to their findings. Specifically, they suggested exploring therapies targeting enteroendocrine cells or serotonin pathways and examining the role of different EEC types in gut motility during inflammation. The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health. The investigators disclosed no conflicts of interest.

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AGA Clinical Guideline Stresses Patient Preferences in Barrett’s Treatment

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 05/17/2024 - 05:15

The American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) has released updated evidence-based recommendations on the endoscopic eradication therapy (EET) of Barrett’s esophagus (BE) and related neoplasms.

Published in Gastroenterology , the clinical practice guideline makes five main recommendations — one strong and four conditional — based on very low to moderate evidence. It also stresses that providers should practice shared decision making according to patient preferences and risk perception.

Dr. Joel H. Rubenstein, Barrett’s Esophagus Program in the Division of Gastroenterology at University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor
University of Michigan Medical School
Dr. Joel H. Rubenstein

For the most part, the new guideline is not a significant departure from the way expert endoscopists are currently practicing EET for BE and related neoplasia, gastroenterologist Joel H. Rubenstein, MD, MSc, AGAF, of the Barrett’s Esophagus Program in the Division of Gastroenterology at University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor, said in an interview. One of three first authors of the guideline, Dr. Rubenstein added, “There is, however, considerable variability in how endoscopists practice, and we hope this guidance will serve as a useful resource to refer to for best practices.”

Added gastroenterologist Tarek Sawas, MD, MPH, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, “We hope the update will provide some clarity for practice and for implementation, while allowing gastroenterologists the freedom to decide what is best for patients based on lesion characteristics.”

Dr. Tarek Sawas, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas
UT Southwestern
Dr. Tarek Sawas


Dr. Sawas added that one of the differences in the new guideline relates to the approach to low-grade dysplasia. While earlier guidance favored treatment over surveillance, patient preferences should now be factored into management. “Some patients are risk-averse and prefer to wait and watch, while others place more value on treatment and just want to get on with it,” he said.

When this guideline was circulated for public comment, “the areas prompting the most feedback was on our current suggestions against the routine use of EET in non-dysplastic BE and for the use of either endoscopic mucosal resection [EMR] or endoscopic submucosal dissection [ESD] for resection — with the expectation that the vast majority may be managed with EMR,” Dr. Rubenstein said.

“We felt that ESD would work best for larger lesions,” explained Dr. Sawas. “There aren’t a lot data in this area, just some observational studies, but we should have more data for comparison in the next few years.”

The incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma continues to rise and an update was deemed in order since the AGA’s last formal guidance on this subject using the systematic GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) methodology was issued in 2011. “In the following time span, there’s been a lot of research, particularly with regard to management of low-grade dysplasia and endoscopic resection techniques,”  Dr. Rubenstein said.
 

Key Recommendations

The 14 guideline panelists made the following suggestions for treatment and implementation based on different levels of certainty of evidence (CoE):

1. If high-grade dysplasia (HGD) is present, EET is recommended over surveillance, with subsequent surveillance performed at 3, 6, and 12 months, and annually thereafter. (Strong recommendation, moderate CoE).

Surveillance endoscopies should obtain targeted tissue samples of visible lesions and random biopsies of the cardia and distal 2 cm of the tubular esophagus.

2. In patients with low-grade dysplasia, EET is also preferred to surveillance. But for those placing a higher value on the certain harms and a lower value on the uncertain benefits of EET for reducing mortality, surveillance endoscopy is a reasonable option. (Conditional recommendation, low CoE).

Following EET, clinicians should perform surveillance at years 1 and 3 after complete eradication of intestinal metaplasia, then revert to the surveillance intervals used in non-dysplastic BE.

3. For non-dysplastic BE, the AGA advises against the routine use of EET. (Conditional recommendation, low CoE).

4. Patients undergoing EET should have resection of visible lesions followed by ablation of the remaining BE segment rather than resection of the entire segment.

In patients with only a small area of BE beyond the visible lesion, endoscopic resection is acceptable and may be preferred over repeated ablation. Radiofrequency ablation is the preferred ablative modality. (Conditional recommendation, very low CoE).

5. For treating visible neoplastic lesions the AGA suggests either EMR or ESD based on lesion characteristics. (Conditional recommendation, very low CoE).

Patients with suspected T1 esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) should be considered for EET. Endoscopic resection is recommended over endoscopic ultrasound for distinguishing EAC from HGD and for staging depth of invasion.

The vast majority of neoplastic lesions may be managed with EMR rather than ESD. Patients who have bulky lesions, or lesions highly suspicious of at least T1b invasion and are deemed candidates for endoscopic resection might benefit from ESD over EMR. Those with previously failed EMR might benefit from ESD.

As to the generally low quality of the supporting evidence, Dr. Rubenstein said, “Unfortunately, very few decisions we make in medicine are supported by high certainty of evidence, but we still have to make a decision.” He pointed out that the guideline highlights areas for future research that could help strengthen or change the guideline’s recommendations.

Considering benefits and harms, the panelists concluded that overall CoE across critical desirable outcomes of disease progression to EAC was moderate. Patient-important outcomes informing the harms were strictures, major bleeding perforation, and serious adverse events.
 

Lifestyle

The guidance also urges providers to counsel BE patients on tobacco cessation and weight loss if needed, and notes the specter of cancer may incentivize patients to make lifestyle changes.

The most common causes of death in EET patients are cardiovascular disease and other cancers, for which tobacco use and obesity are also major risk factors, and tobacco is associated with strictures, the panelists wrote. “The prospect of progression to cancer in patients with dysplastic BE often holds greater valence than prior counseling attempts, and patients may re-commit to such efforts following consultation for EET.”
 

Going Forward

Areas for future attention include:

  • Identifying populations with non-dysplastic BE whose risk warrants EET
  • Balancing risk and benefit of EET in low-grade dysplasia
  • Randomized controlled trials comparing EMR and ESD in higher-risk lesions
  • Optimal management of post-EET pain
  • Stricture prevention and control
  • Managing resistant/recurrent disease beyond reflux control
  • Optimal surveillance and biopsy strategies following EETThis guideline was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, the Veterans Administration Health Services and Research Division, and the Katy O. and Paul M. Rady Endowed Chair in Esophageal Cancer Research at the University of Colorado.

Dr. Sawas had no competing interests to disclose. Dr. Rubenstein reported research funding from Lucid Diagnostics.

Several other panelists reported research funding or consultation fees from various pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.

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The American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) has released updated evidence-based recommendations on the endoscopic eradication therapy (EET) of Barrett’s esophagus (BE) and related neoplasms.

Published in Gastroenterology , the clinical practice guideline makes five main recommendations — one strong and four conditional — based on very low to moderate evidence. It also stresses that providers should practice shared decision making according to patient preferences and risk perception.

Dr. Joel H. Rubenstein, Barrett’s Esophagus Program in the Division of Gastroenterology at University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor
University of Michigan Medical School
Dr. Joel H. Rubenstein

For the most part, the new guideline is not a significant departure from the way expert endoscopists are currently practicing EET for BE and related neoplasia, gastroenterologist Joel H. Rubenstein, MD, MSc, AGAF, of the Barrett’s Esophagus Program in the Division of Gastroenterology at University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor, said in an interview. One of three first authors of the guideline, Dr. Rubenstein added, “There is, however, considerable variability in how endoscopists practice, and we hope this guidance will serve as a useful resource to refer to for best practices.”

Added gastroenterologist Tarek Sawas, MD, MPH, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, “We hope the update will provide some clarity for practice and for implementation, while allowing gastroenterologists the freedom to decide what is best for patients based on lesion characteristics.”

Dr. Tarek Sawas, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas
UT Southwestern
Dr. Tarek Sawas


Dr. Sawas added that one of the differences in the new guideline relates to the approach to low-grade dysplasia. While earlier guidance favored treatment over surveillance, patient preferences should now be factored into management. “Some patients are risk-averse and prefer to wait and watch, while others place more value on treatment and just want to get on with it,” he said.

When this guideline was circulated for public comment, “the areas prompting the most feedback was on our current suggestions against the routine use of EET in non-dysplastic BE and for the use of either endoscopic mucosal resection [EMR] or endoscopic submucosal dissection [ESD] for resection — with the expectation that the vast majority may be managed with EMR,” Dr. Rubenstein said.

“We felt that ESD would work best for larger lesions,” explained Dr. Sawas. “There aren’t a lot data in this area, just some observational studies, but we should have more data for comparison in the next few years.”

The incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma continues to rise and an update was deemed in order since the AGA’s last formal guidance on this subject using the systematic GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) methodology was issued in 2011. “In the following time span, there’s been a lot of research, particularly with regard to management of low-grade dysplasia and endoscopic resection techniques,”  Dr. Rubenstein said.
 

Key Recommendations

The 14 guideline panelists made the following suggestions for treatment and implementation based on different levels of certainty of evidence (CoE):

1. If high-grade dysplasia (HGD) is present, EET is recommended over surveillance, with subsequent surveillance performed at 3, 6, and 12 months, and annually thereafter. (Strong recommendation, moderate CoE).

Surveillance endoscopies should obtain targeted tissue samples of visible lesions and random biopsies of the cardia and distal 2 cm of the tubular esophagus.

2. In patients with low-grade dysplasia, EET is also preferred to surveillance. But for those placing a higher value on the certain harms and a lower value on the uncertain benefits of EET for reducing mortality, surveillance endoscopy is a reasonable option. (Conditional recommendation, low CoE).

Following EET, clinicians should perform surveillance at years 1 and 3 after complete eradication of intestinal metaplasia, then revert to the surveillance intervals used in non-dysplastic BE.

3. For non-dysplastic BE, the AGA advises against the routine use of EET. (Conditional recommendation, low CoE).

4. Patients undergoing EET should have resection of visible lesions followed by ablation of the remaining BE segment rather than resection of the entire segment.

In patients with only a small area of BE beyond the visible lesion, endoscopic resection is acceptable and may be preferred over repeated ablation. Radiofrequency ablation is the preferred ablative modality. (Conditional recommendation, very low CoE).

5. For treating visible neoplastic lesions the AGA suggests either EMR or ESD based on lesion characteristics. (Conditional recommendation, very low CoE).

Patients with suspected T1 esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) should be considered for EET. Endoscopic resection is recommended over endoscopic ultrasound for distinguishing EAC from HGD and for staging depth of invasion.

The vast majority of neoplastic lesions may be managed with EMR rather than ESD. Patients who have bulky lesions, or lesions highly suspicious of at least T1b invasion and are deemed candidates for endoscopic resection might benefit from ESD over EMR. Those with previously failed EMR might benefit from ESD.

As to the generally low quality of the supporting evidence, Dr. Rubenstein said, “Unfortunately, very few decisions we make in medicine are supported by high certainty of evidence, but we still have to make a decision.” He pointed out that the guideline highlights areas for future research that could help strengthen or change the guideline’s recommendations.

Considering benefits and harms, the panelists concluded that overall CoE across critical desirable outcomes of disease progression to EAC was moderate. Patient-important outcomes informing the harms were strictures, major bleeding perforation, and serious adverse events.
 

Lifestyle

The guidance also urges providers to counsel BE patients on tobacco cessation and weight loss if needed, and notes the specter of cancer may incentivize patients to make lifestyle changes.

The most common causes of death in EET patients are cardiovascular disease and other cancers, for which tobacco use and obesity are also major risk factors, and tobacco is associated with strictures, the panelists wrote. “The prospect of progression to cancer in patients with dysplastic BE often holds greater valence than prior counseling attempts, and patients may re-commit to such efforts following consultation for EET.”
 

Going Forward

Areas for future attention include:

  • Identifying populations with non-dysplastic BE whose risk warrants EET
  • Balancing risk and benefit of EET in low-grade dysplasia
  • Randomized controlled trials comparing EMR and ESD in higher-risk lesions
  • Optimal management of post-EET pain
  • Stricture prevention and control
  • Managing resistant/recurrent disease beyond reflux control
  • Optimal surveillance and biopsy strategies following EETThis guideline was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, the Veterans Administration Health Services and Research Division, and the Katy O. and Paul M. Rady Endowed Chair in Esophageal Cancer Research at the University of Colorado.

Dr. Sawas had no competing interests to disclose. Dr. Rubenstein reported research funding from Lucid Diagnostics.

Several other panelists reported research funding or consultation fees from various pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.

The American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) has released updated evidence-based recommendations on the endoscopic eradication therapy (EET) of Barrett’s esophagus (BE) and related neoplasms.

Published in Gastroenterology , the clinical practice guideline makes five main recommendations — one strong and four conditional — based on very low to moderate evidence. It also stresses that providers should practice shared decision making according to patient preferences and risk perception.

Dr. Joel H. Rubenstein, Barrett’s Esophagus Program in the Division of Gastroenterology at University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor
University of Michigan Medical School
Dr. Joel H. Rubenstein

For the most part, the new guideline is not a significant departure from the way expert endoscopists are currently practicing EET for BE and related neoplasia, gastroenterologist Joel H. Rubenstein, MD, MSc, AGAF, of the Barrett’s Esophagus Program in the Division of Gastroenterology at University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor, said in an interview. One of three first authors of the guideline, Dr. Rubenstein added, “There is, however, considerable variability in how endoscopists practice, and we hope this guidance will serve as a useful resource to refer to for best practices.”

Added gastroenterologist Tarek Sawas, MD, MPH, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, “We hope the update will provide some clarity for practice and for implementation, while allowing gastroenterologists the freedom to decide what is best for patients based on lesion characteristics.”

Dr. Tarek Sawas, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas
UT Southwestern
Dr. Tarek Sawas


Dr. Sawas added that one of the differences in the new guideline relates to the approach to low-grade dysplasia. While earlier guidance favored treatment over surveillance, patient preferences should now be factored into management. “Some patients are risk-averse and prefer to wait and watch, while others place more value on treatment and just want to get on with it,” he said.

When this guideline was circulated for public comment, “the areas prompting the most feedback was on our current suggestions against the routine use of EET in non-dysplastic BE and for the use of either endoscopic mucosal resection [EMR] or endoscopic submucosal dissection [ESD] for resection — with the expectation that the vast majority may be managed with EMR,” Dr. Rubenstein said.

“We felt that ESD would work best for larger lesions,” explained Dr. Sawas. “There aren’t a lot data in this area, just some observational studies, but we should have more data for comparison in the next few years.”

The incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma continues to rise and an update was deemed in order since the AGA’s last formal guidance on this subject using the systematic GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) methodology was issued in 2011. “In the following time span, there’s been a lot of research, particularly with regard to management of low-grade dysplasia and endoscopic resection techniques,”  Dr. Rubenstein said.
 

Key Recommendations

The 14 guideline panelists made the following suggestions for treatment and implementation based on different levels of certainty of evidence (CoE):

1. If high-grade dysplasia (HGD) is present, EET is recommended over surveillance, with subsequent surveillance performed at 3, 6, and 12 months, and annually thereafter. (Strong recommendation, moderate CoE).

Surveillance endoscopies should obtain targeted tissue samples of visible lesions and random biopsies of the cardia and distal 2 cm of the tubular esophagus.

2. In patients with low-grade dysplasia, EET is also preferred to surveillance. But for those placing a higher value on the certain harms and a lower value on the uncertain benefits of EET for reducing mortality, surveillance endoscopy is a reasonable option. (Conditional recommendation, low CoE).

Following EET, clinicians should perform surveillance at years 1 and 3 after complete eradication of intestinal metaplasia, then revert to the surveillance intervals used in non-dysplastic BE.

3. For non-dysplastic BE, the AGA advises against the routine use of EET. (Conditional recommendation, low CoE).

4. Patients undergoing EET should have resection of visible lesions followed by ablation of the remaining BE segment rather than resection of the entire segment.

In patients with only a small area of BE beyond the visible lesion, endoscopic resection is acceptable and may be preferred over repeated ablation. Radiofrequency ablation is the preferred ablative modality. (Conditional recommendation, very low CoE).

5. For treating visible neoplastic lesions the AGA suggests either EMR or ESD based on lesion characteristics. (Conditional recommendation, very low CoE).

Patients with suspected T1 esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) should be considered for EET. Endoscopic resection is recommended over endoscopic ultrasound for distinguishing EAC from HGD and for staging depth of invasion.

The vast majority of neoplastic lesions may be managed with EMR rather than ESD. Patients who have bulky lesions, or lesions highly suspicious of at least T1b invasion and are deemed candidates for endoscopic resection might benefit from ESD over EMR. Those with previously failed EMR might benefit from ESD.

As to the generally low quality of the supporting evidence, Dr. Rubenstein said, “Unfortunately, very few decisions we make in medicine are supported by high certainty of evidence, but we still have to make a decision.” He pointed out that the guideline highlights areas for future research that could help strengthen or change the guideline’s recommendations.

Considering benefits and harms, the panelists concluded that overall CoE across critical desirable outcomes of disease progression to EAC was moderate. Patient-important outcomes informing the harms were strictures, major bleeding perforation, and serious adverse events.
 

Lifestyle

The guidance also urges providers to counsel BE patients on tobacco cessation and weight loss if needed, and notes the specter of cancer may incentivize patients to make lifestyle changes.

The most common causes of death in EET patients are cardiovascular disease and other cancers, for which tobacco use and obesity are also major risk factors, and tobacco is associated with strictures, the panelists wrote. “The prospect of progression to cancer in patients with dysplastic BE often holds greater valence than prior counseling attempts, and patients may re-commit to such efforts following consultation for EET.”
 

Going Forward

Areas for future attention include:

  • Identifying populations with non-dysplastic BE whose risk warrants EET
  • Balancing risk and benefit of EET in low-grade dysplasia
  • Randomized controlled trials comparing EMR and ESD in higher-risk lesions
  • Optimal management of post-EET pain
  • Stricture prevention and control
  • Managing resistant/recurrent disease beyond reflux control
  • Optimal surveillance and biopsy strategies following EETThis guideline was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, the Veterans Administration Health Services and Research Division, and the Katy O. and Paul M. Rady Endowed Chair in Esophageal Cancer Research at the University of Colorado.

Dr. Sawas had no competing interests to disclose. Dr. Rubenstein reported research funding from Lucid Diagnostics.

Several other panelists reported research funding or consultation fees from various pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.

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High-Alcohol Intake in MASLD Increases Risk of Cirrhosis

Critical Need for Early Tx of High-Risk Alcohol Use
Article Type
Changed
Fri, 05/10/2024 - 13:41

One in nine patients with steatotic liver disease reported concurrent alcohol use, and more than 11% reported high-risk consumption, a national study of more than a million US veterans found.

Moreover, the combination of steatotic liver disease and high-risk alcohol intake carried a more than 43% higher long-term risk of liver cirrhosis compared with no alcohol use, according to researchers led by Robert J. Wong, MD, MS, of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Palo Alto, at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California.

However, the study found that “reducing alcohol use lowers risk of cirrhosis, emphasizing the importance of timely alcohol use assessment and early interventions to address high-risk alcohol use in steatotic liver disease,” Dr. Wong and associates wrote in Gastroenterology.

Although concurrent moderate to heavy alcohol intake would be expected to lead more rapidly to liver disease progression, the existing literature has been conflicting, the authors noted. Several studies have even found moderate alcohol associated with a lower risk of advanced liver disease among MASLD patients, including that by Dunn et al. .
 

The Study

MASLD patients were identified through the US Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse from January 1, 2010, through December 31, 2017, with follow-up through December 31, 2022.

Alcohol use was assessed by Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test–Concise (AUDIT-C) scores and was categorized as follows: no alcohol (AUDIT-C = 0), low-risk alcohol use (AUDIT-C 1-2 for women and 1–3 for men), and high-risk alcohol (AUDIT-C ≥ 3 for women and ≥ 4 for men).

Among the 1,156,189 veterans with MASLD, 54.2% reported no alcohol, 34.6% low-risk alcohol, and 11.2% high-risk alcohol use. In median follow-up of nine to 10 years, incidence rates of cirrhosis were .53 per 100 person-years for no use, .42 for low-risk use, and .76 for high-risk use.

In contrast to patients with baseline high-risk alcohol intake who reported no change in use, those who decreased their alcohol intake during follow-up experienced a 39% reduction in the long-term risk of cirrhosis, for a hazard ratio of .61 (95% CI, .45-.83, P < .01).

Dr. Robert J. Wong, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Palo Alto, at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California
Dr. Wong
Dr. Robert J. Wong


About 70% of patients were non-Hispanic Whites and more than 90% were male in all consumption categories. The no-alcohol group was older than the high-risk alcohol group: 64 years vs 59.9 years (P < .0001). Compared with the high-risk alcohol group, the no-alcohol group had a significantly greater proportion of comorbid diabetes (62.3% vs 42.5%), hypertension (77.9% vs 69.1%), or cardiovascular disease (40.2% vs 25.9%, P < .0001 for all comparisons).

In a significant study observation, fewer than 5% of patients with high-risk use received behavioral or pharmacologic therapy and of those who did, most were referred for or received treatment at or near the time of cirrhosis diagnosis. “This highlights a major gap in linking patients with high-risk alcohol use to appropriate behavioral or pharmacologic therapy in a timely manner and may reflect missed opportunities to prevent further alcohol-related morbidity and mortality,” Dr. Wong and colleagues wrote.

They called for studies of novel interventions for timely assessment of alcohol use with linkage to addiction services. They cited the need to understand the interaction between levels of alcohol use and underlying MASLD, adding, “More research is also needed to understand whether this interaction varies across different populations.”

This study received no specific funding. Dr. Wong reported funding through his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Thera Technologies.

Body

 

Recent consensus in defining metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) has raised awareness for the combined impact of cardiometabolic risk factors and alcohol consumption on liver disease progression. This study by Wong et al. highlights the undeniable influence of high-risk alcohol use on the development of advanced liver disease.

In a national cohort of over 1 million US veterans with steatotic liver disease (SLD), patients with high-risk alcohol use based on AUDIT-C assessment exhibited > 43% greater risk of cirrhosis compared to those with no alcohol use. The relationship between alcohol and liver severity in SLD was observed even after excluding patients meeting classification for predominant alcohol-associated liver disease. While increased alcohol use was associated with increased incidence of cirrhosis, decreased alcohol use led to a notable 39% reduction in cirrhosis risk over time.

Reducing alcohol consumption remains best practice guidelines for mitigating risk of progression in steatotic liver disease. However, results of this study emphasize the critical need for early identification and treatment of high-risk alcohol use in all patients with SLD. While universal recommendations for alcohol abstinence provides pragmatic implementation, there is a significant need to better understand the interaction of specific metabolic risk factors and patterns of alcohol use across the spectrum of MetALD to guide personalized recommendations for patient education and management.

Dr. Tiffany Wu, Transplant Hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota
Mayo Clinic
Dr. Tiffany Wu


Further research using prospective clinical trial design is needed to evaluate the interplay of alcohol consumption and metabolic risk factors across variable age, sex, genetics, and environmental exposures that are increasingly being recognized as vital drivers of health and disease.

Tiffany Wu, MD, MS, is a fellow in Transplant Hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. She has no conflicts.

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Body

 

Recent consensus in defining metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) has raised awareness for the combined impact of cardiometabolic risk factors and alcohol consumption on liver disease progression. This study by Wong et al. highlights the undeniable influence of high-risk alcohol use on the development of advanced liver disease.

In a national cohort of over 1 million US veterans with steatotic liver disease (SLD), patients with high-risk alcohol use based on AUDIT-C assessment exhibited > 43% greater risk of cirrhosis compared to those with no alcohol use. The relationship between alcohol and liver severity in SLD was observed even after excluding patients meeting classification for predominant alcohol-associated liver disease. While increased alcohol use was associated with increased incidence of cirrhosis, decreased alcohol use led to a notable 39% reduction in cirrhosis risk over time.

Reducing alcohol consumption remains best practice guidelines for mitigating risk of progression in steatotic liver disease. However, results of this study emphasize the critical need for early identification and treatment of high-risk alcohol use in all patients with SLD. While universal recommendations for alcohol abstinence provides pragmatic implementation, there is a significant need to better understand the interaction of specific metabolic risk factors and patterns of alcohol use across the spectrum of MetALD to guide personalized recommendations for patient education and management.

Dr. Tiffany Wu, Transplant Hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota
Mayo Clinic
Dr. Tiffany Wu


Further research using prospective clinical trial design is needed to evaluate the interplay of alcohol consumption and metabolic risk factors across variable age, sex, genetics, and environmental exposures that are increasingly being recognized as vital drivers of health and disease.

Tiffany Wu, MD, MS, is a fellow in Transplant Hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. She has no conflicts.

Body

 

Recent consensus in defining metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) has raised awareness for the combined impact of cardiometabolic risk factors and alcohol consumption on liver disease progression. This study by Wong et al. highlights the undeniable influence of high-risk alcohol use on the development of advanced liver disease.

In a national cohort of over 1 million US veterans with steatotic liver disease (SLD), patients with high-risk alcohol use based on AUDIT-C assessment exhibited > 43% greater risk of cirrhosis compared to those with no alcohol use. The relationship between alcohol and liver severity in SLD was observed even after excluding patients meeting classification for predominant alcohol-associated liver disease. While increased alcohol use was associated with increased incidence of cirrhosis, decreased alcohol use led to a notable 39% reduction in cirrhosis risk over time.

Reducing alcohol consumption remains best practice guidelines for mitigating risk of progression in steatotic liver disease. However, results of this study emphasize the critical need for early identification and treatment of high-risk alcohol use in all patients with SLD. While universal recommendations for alcohol abstinence provides pragmatic implementation, there is a significant need to better understand the interaction of specific metabolic risk factors and patterns of alcohol use across the spectrum of MetALD to guide personalized recommendations for patient education and management.

Dr. Tiffany Wu, Transplant Hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota
Mayo Clinic
Dr. Tiffany Wu


Further research using prospective clinical trial design is needed to evaluate the interplay of alcohol consumption and metabolic risk factors across variable age, sex, genetics, and environmental exposures that are increasingly being recognized as vital drivers of health and disease.

Tiffany Wu, MD, MS, is a fellow in Transplant Hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. She has no conflicts.

Title
Critical Need for Early Tx of High-Risk Alcohol Use
Critical Need for Early Tx of High-Risk Alcohol Use

One in nine patients with steatotic liver disease reported concurrent alcohol use, and more than 11% reported high-risk consumption, a national study of more than a million US veterans found.

Moreover, the combination of steatotic liver disease and high-risk alcohol intake carried a more than 43% higher long-term risk of liver cirrhosis compared with no alcohol use, according to researchers led by Robert J. Wong, MD, MS, of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Palo Alto, at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California.

However, the study found that “reducing alcohol use lowers risk of cirrhosis, emphasizing the importance of timely alcohol use assessment and early interventions to address high-risk alcohol use in steatotic liver disease,” Dr. Wong and associates wrote in Gastroenterology.

Although concurrent moderate to heavy alcohol intake would be expected to lead more rapidly to liver disease progression, the existing literature has been conflicting, the authors noted. Several studies have even found moderate alcohol associated with a lower risk of advanced liver disease among MASLD patients, including that by Dunn et al. .
 

The Study

MASLD patients were identified through the US Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse from January 1, 2010, through December 31, 2017, with follow-up through December 31, 2022.

Alcohol use was assessed by Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test–Concise (AUDIT-C) scores and was categorized as follows: no alcohol (AUDIT-C = 0), low-risk alcohol use (AUDIT-C 1-2 for women and 1–3 for men), and high-risk alcohol (AUDIT-C ≥ 3 for women and ≥ 4 for men).

Among the 1,156,189 veterans with MASLD, 54.2% reported no alcohol, 34.6% low-risk alcohol, and 11.2% high-risk alcohol use. In median follow-up of nine to 10 years, incidence rates of cirrhosis were .53 per 100 person-years for no use, .42 for low-risk use, and .76 for high-risk use.

In contrast to patients with baseline high-risk alcohol intake who reported no change in use, those who decreased their alcohol intake during follow-up experienced a 39% reduction in the long-term risk of cirrhosis, for a hazard ratio of .61 (95% CI, .45-.83, P < .01).

Dr. Robert J. Wong, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Palo Alto, at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California
Dr. Wong
Dr. Robert J. Wong


About 70% of patients were non-Hispanic Whites and more than 90% were male in all consumption categories. The no-alcohol group was older than the high-risk alcohol group: 64 years vs 59.9 years (P < .0001). Compared with the high-risk alcohol group, the no-alcohol group had a significantly greater proportion of comorbid diabetes (62.3% vs 42.5%), hypertension (77.9% vs 69.1%), or cardiovascular disease (40.2% vs 25.9%, P < .0001 for all comparisons).

In a significant study observation, fewer than 5% of patients with high-risk use received behavioral or pharmacologic therapy and of those who did, most were referred for or received treatment at or near the time of cirrhosis diagnosis. “This highlights a major gap in linking patients with high-risk alcohol use to appropriate behavioral or pharmacologic therapy in a timely manner and may reflect missed opportunities to prevent further alcohol-related morbidity and mortality,” Dr. Wong and colleagues wrote.

They called for studies of novel interventions for timely assessment of alcohol use with linkage to addiction services. They cited the need to understand the interaction between levels of alcohol use and underlying MASLD, adding, “More research is also needed to understand whether this interaction varies across different populations.”

This study received no specific funding. Dr. Wong reported funding through his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Thera Technologies.

One in nine patients with steatotic liver disease reported concurrent alcohol use, and more than 11% reported high-risk consumption, a national study of more than a million US veterans found.

Moreover, the combination of steatotic liver disease and high-risk alcohol intake carried a more than 43% higher long-term risk of liver cirrhosis compared with no alcohol use, according to researchers led by Robert J. Wong, MD, MS, of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Palo Alto, at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California.

However, the study found that “reducing alcohol use lowers risk of cirrhosis, emphasizing the importance of timely alcohol use assessment and early interventions to address high-risk alcohol use in steatotic liver disease,” Dr. Wong and associates wrote in Gastroenterology.

Although concurrent moderate to heavy alcohol intake would be expected to lead more rapidly to liver disease progression, the existing literature has been conflicting, the authors noted. Several studies have even found moderate alcohol associated with a lower risk of advanced liver disease among MASLD patients, including that by Dunn et al. .
 

The Study

MASLD patients were identified through the US Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse from January 1, 2010, through December 31, 2017, with follow-up through December 31, 2022.

Alcohol use was assessed by Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test–Concise (AUDIT-C) scores and was categorized as follows: no alcohol (AUDIT-C = 0), low-risk alcohol use (AUDIT-C 1-2 for women and 1–3 for men), and high-risk alcohol (AUDIT-C ≥ 3 for women and ≥ 4 for men).

Among the 1,156,189 veterans with MASLD, 54.2% reported no alcohol, 34.6% low-risk alcohol, and 11.2% high-risk alcohol use. In median follow-up of nine to 10 years, incidence rates of cirrhosis were .53 per 100 person-years for no use, .42 for low-risk use, and .76 for high-risk use.

In contrast to patients with baseline high-risk alcohol intake who reported no change in use, those who decreased their alcohol intake during follow-up experienced a 39% reduction in the long-term risk of cirrhosis, for a hazard ratio of .61 (95% CI, .45-.83, P < .01).

Dr. Robert J. Wong, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Palo Alto, at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California
Dr. Wong
Dr. Robert J. Wong


About 70% of patients were non-Hispanic Whites and more than 90% were male in all consumption categories. The no-alcohol group was older than the high-risk alcohol group: 64 years vs 59.9 years (P < .0001). Compared with the high-risk alcohol group, the no-alcohol group had a significantly greater proportion of comorbid diabetes (62.3% vs 42.5%), hypertension (77.9% vs 69.1%), or cardiovascular disease (40.2% vs 25.9%, P < .0001 for all comparisons).

In a significant study observation, fewer than 5% of patients with high-risk use received behavioral or pharmacologic therapy and of those who did, most were referred for or received treatment at or near the time of cirrhosis diagnosis. “This highlights a major gap in linking patients with high-risk alcohol use to appropriate behavioral or pharmacologic therapy in a timely manner and may reflect missed opportunities to prevent further alcohol-related morbidity and mortality,” Dr. Wong and colleagues wrote.

They called for studies of novel interventions for timely assessment of alcohol use with linkage to addiction services. They cited the need to understand the interaction between levels of alcohol use and underlying MASLD, adding, “More research is also needed to understand whether this interaction varies across different populations.”

This study received no specific funding. Dr. Wong reported funding through his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Thera Technologies.

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