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Quality of Life After Surgery for End-stage Achalasia

Completed
Conditions
Quality of Life
Symptoms and Signs
Interventions
Other: Objective outcome
Other: Quality of life
Registration Number
NCT04152902
Lead Sponsor
University of Bologna
Brief Summary

Therapy for end-stage achalasia is under debate: comparative data on the long-term functional results of myotomy and oesophagectomy are lacking. The study aimed to compare the objective outcomes and quality of life after oesophageal myotomy and oesophagectomy.

The study included 31 patients (57 years) who underwent the Heller-Dor procedure with verticalisation of the distal oesophagus (pull-down technique dedicated to sigmoid oesophagus treatment) and 29 patients (recurrence free, 64 years) (p=0.539) who underwent oesophagectomy for end-stage achalasia or for cancer, extracted from a database designed for prospective clinical research. The objective outcomes of treatment were evaluated with semi-quantitative scales investigating dysphagia, reflux symptoms and endoscopic oesophagitis. Quality of life was assessed with the SF-36 questionnaire.

Detailed Description

Patients were extracted from a database designed for prospective clinical research on benign and malignant oesophageal diseases. For this study, the investigators considered patients who underwent operations for end-stage achalasia from January 1987-July 2018 and patients who survived after primary esophagectomy for oesophageal cancer between January 2008 and December 2018 without undergoing neoadjuvant/adjuvant therapy. End-stage achalasia was diagnosed on the basis of clinical history, upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy and barium swallow results (oesophageal diameter larger than 6 cm, distal oesophagus kinked towards the left side, outside the axis). Standard oesophageal manometry, or more recently, high-resolution manometry, was routinely performed. Cases of pseudo-achalasia (oesophageal dilation secondary to organic stenosis of the cardia) were excluded based on clinical, endoscopic and histology patterns. In the presence of end-stage achalasia Pull-down Heller-Dor was the first primary treatment option for patients with the following: a) no severe mucosal inflammation or moderate/high grade dysplasia and b) redo surgery exclusively for dysphagia relapse due to insufficient myotomy. Esophagectomy was the treatment of choice for patients with the following: a) relapsed dysphagia after myotomy due to scarring that caused stenosis of the cardia, b) iterative surgery, c) cancerization risk patterns, and d) a diagnosis of cancer.

The pull-down Helle-Dor procedure aimed to restore the vertical axis of the intraabdominal portion of the oesophagus as much as possible. In brief, before performing the myotomy and the anterior fundoplication, at least 6 cm of the mediastinal oesophagus was fully isolated; two or more U intramuscular stitches were applied on the curling of the right side of the oesophagus, pulled down and rotated towards the right side of the gastro-oesophageal junction. The pull-down Heller-Dor operation was performed under manometric control.

Esophagectomy was performed with open technique, or recently, with a minimally invasive technique. The stomach was always the oesophageal substitute, and the oesophagogastric anastomosis was preferably located at the thoracic dome or at the neck to minimize the risk of postoperative reflux oesophagitis or cancer growth in the residual dilated oesophagus. Patients who underwent esophagectomy for cancer not related to achalasia were extracted from the relative case series to form a control group that matched the end-stage achalasia study group according to age and surgical technique; these patients had not undergone neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy and were cancer free at follow-up.

The duration of achalasia symptoms was calculated starting from the date of onset to the date of surgery at the investigator's institution. After surgery, the patients underwent a timed follow-up composed of clinical interviews, upper GI tract barium swallow and endoscopy. The symptoms were evaluated according to semi-quantitative scales graded from 0 (absence) to 3 (maximal intensity) based on Van Trappen's criteria for dysphagia and Visick's criteria for gastro-oesophageal reflux. Upper GI endoscopy aimed to detect post Heller's myotomy reflux oesophagitis, Barrett's oesophagus and areas suspected for dysplasia or cancer. Reflux oesophagitis was initially assessed according to the Savary-Miller and Ismail Beigi criteria and successively assessed according to the Los Angeles classification. The final outcome of surgical therapy was assessed according to a semi-quantitative scale graded as excellent, good, fair and poor, according to quantitative grades for dysphagia, reflux symptoms and oesophagitis.

Quality of life was assessed by the version of the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36) validated for Italy. The questionnaire was a generic Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQL) measure that investigated eight specific health domains: physical functioning (PF), restrictions in activities due to physical (RP) or emotional health (RE), bodily pain (BP), general health (GH), vitality (VT), mental health (MH) and social functioning (SF). The SF-36 scores for each health domain ranged from 0 (poor HRQL) to 100 (best HRQL). Patients self-administered the questionnaires they received in mail for the specific purpose of this study.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
OESOPHAGECTOMYQuality of lifeOE was performed with open technique, or recently, with a minimally invasive technique. The stomach was always the oesophageal substitute, and the oesophagogastric anastomosis was preferably located at the thoracic dome or at the neck to minimize the risk of postoperative reflux oesophagitis or cancer growth in the residual dilated oesophagus
PULL-DOWN HELLER-DORQuality of lifeThe PD-HD procedure aimed to restore the vertical axis of the intraabdominal portion of the oesophagus as much as possible. In brief, before performing the myotomy and the anterior fundoplication according to Dor, at least 6 cm of the mediastinal oesophagus was fully isolated; two or more U intramuscular stitches were applied on the curling of the right side of the oesophagus, pulled down and rotated towards the right side of the gastro-oesophageal junction. The PD-HD operation was performed under manometric control
PULL-DOWN HELLER-DORObjective outcomeThe PD-HD procedure aimed to restore the vertical axis of the intraabdominal portion of the oesophagus as much as possible. In brief, before performing the myotomy and the anterior fundoplication according to Dor, at least 6 cm of the mediastinal oesophagus was fully isolated; two or more U intramuscular stitches were applied on the curling of the right side of the oesophagus, pulled down and rotated towards the right side of the gastro-oesophageal junction. The PD-HD operation was performed under manometric control
OESOPHAGECTOMYObjective outcomeOE was performed with open technique, or recently, with a minimally invasive technique. The stomach was always the oesophageal substitute, and the oesophagogastric anastomosis was preferably located at the thoracic dome or at the neck to minimize the risk of postoperative reflux oesophagitis or cancer growth in the residual dilated oesophagus
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
change quality of life from preoperative to 3 years after surgery3 years

change quality of life from preoperative to 3 years after surgery. The SF-36 questionnaire investigated eight specific health domains: physical functioning (PF), restrictions in activities due to physical (RP) or emotional health (RE), bodily pain (BP), general health (GH), vitality (VT), mental health (MH) and social functioning (SF). The SF-36 scores for each health domain ranged from 0 (poorer HRQL) to 100 (best HRQL).

change of dysphagia severity from preoperative to 3 years after surgery3 years

changing of dysphagia severity from preoperative to 3 years after surgery. Dysphagia severity is evaluted according to a semiquantitative scale graded from 0 (absence) to 3 ( maximal intensity) based on Van Trappen's criteria

change of gastroesphageal reflux symptoms from preoperative to 3 years after surgey3 years

change of gastroesphageal reflux symptoms from preoperative to 3 years after surgey. Severity of reflux symptoms was evaluated according to a semiquantitative scale graded from 0 (absence) to 3 ( maximal intensity) based on Van Trappen's criteria

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Division of Thoracic Surgery Maria Cecilia Hospital

🇮🇹

Cotignola, RA, Italy

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