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Effectiveness of gastric electrical stimulation in gastroparesis: Results from a large prospectively collected database of national gastroparesis registries
Author(s) -
Abell Thomas L.,
Yamada Goro,
McCallum Richard W.,
Van Natta Mark L.,
Tonascia James,
Parkman Henry P.,
Koch Kenneth L.,
Sarosiek Irene,
Farrugia Gianrico,
Grover Madhusudan,
Hasler William,
Nguyen Linda,
Snape William,
Kuo Braden,
Shulman Robert,
Hamilton Frank A.,
Pasricha Pankaj J.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
neurogastroenterology and motility
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.489
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1365-2982
pISSN - 1350-1925
DOI - 10.1111/nmo.13714
Subject(s) - gastroparesis , nausea , medicine , vomiting , gastric emptying , gastroenterology , stomach
Background Gastric electrical stimulation (GES) for treating gastroparesis symptoms is controversial. Methods We studied 319 idiopathic or diabetic gastroparesis symptom patients from the Gastroparesis Clinical Research Consortium (GpCRC) observational studies: 238 without GES and 81 with GES. We assessed the effects of GES using change in GCSI total score and nausea/vomiting subscales between baseline and 48 weeks. We used propensity score methods to control for imbalances in patient characteristics between comparison groups. Key Results GES patients were clinically worse (40% severe vs. 18% for non‐GES; P  < .001); worse PAGI‐QOL (2.2. vs. 2.6; P  = .003); and worse GCSI total scores (3.5 vs. 2.8; P  < .001). We observed improvements in 48‐week GCSI total scores for GES vs. non‐GES: improvement by ≥ 1‐point (RR = 1.63; 95% CI = (1.14, 2.33); P  = .01) and change from enrollment (difference = −0.5 (−0.8, −0.3); P  < .001). When adjusting for patient characteristics, symptom scores were smaller and not statistically significant: improvement by ≥ 1‐point (RR = 1.29 (0.88, 1.90); P  = .20) and change from the enrollment (difference = −0.3 (−0.6, 0.0); P  = .07). Of the individual items, the nausea improved by ≥ 1 point (RR = 1.31 (1.03, 1.67); P  = .04). Patients with GCSI score ≥ 3.0 tended to improve more than those with score < 3.0. (Adjusted P = 0.02). Conclusions and Inferences This multicenter study of gastroparesis patients found significant improvements in gastroparesis symptoms among GES patients. Accounting for imbalances in patient characteristics, only nausea remained significant. Patients with greater symptoms at baseline improved more after GES. A much larger sample of patients is needed to fully evaluate symptomatic responses and to identify patients likely to respond to GES.

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