Surgical Prevention of Reflux after Esophagectomy for Cancer

Maartje van der Schaaf*, A. Johar, P. Lagergren, I. Rouvelas, James Gossage, Robert Mason, J. Lagergren

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background
Reflux frequently occurs after a gastric conduit has replaced the resected esophagus. In this Swedish population-based cohort study, the potential antireflux effects of using cervical anastomosis, intrathoracic antireflux anastomosis, or pyloric drainage, and a risk of dysphagia due to cervical anastomosis and intrathoracic antireflux anastomosis were studied.

Methods
Patients undergoing esophagectomy with gastric conduit reconstruction in 2001-2005 were included. Reflux symptoms and dysphagia were assessed 6 months and 3 years postoperatively using a validated questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-OES18). The study exposures were cervical anastomosis, antireflux anastomosis, and pyloric drainage procedure. Multivariable logistic regression and propensity-adjusted analyses based on multinomial logistic regression estimated odds ratios (OR) with 95 % confidence intervals (CI), adjusted for potential confounding.

Results
A total of 304 patients were included in the study. Adjusted ORs for reflux symptoms were 0.9 (95 % CI 0.3-2.2) for patients with a cervical anastomosis compared to patients with an intrathoracic anastomosis, 0.9 (95 % CI 0.4-2.0) for patients with an antireflux anastomosis versus patients with a conventional anastomosis, and 1.5 (95 % CI 0.9-2.6) for patients after pyloric drainage versus patients without such a pyloric drainage procedure. Dysphagia was not statistically significantly increased after cervical anastomosis or antireflux anastomosis. ORs were virtually similar 3 years after surgery. No interactions were identified. The propensity analyses rendered similar results as the logistic regression models, except for a possibly increased dysphagia with a cervical anastomosis.

Conclusions
Cervical anastomosis, antireflux anastomosis, and pyloric drainage do not seem to prevent reflux symptoms 6 months or 3 years after esophagectomy for cancer with a gastric conduit.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3655-3661
Number of pages7
JournalAnnals of Surgical Oncology
Volume20
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2013

Keywords

  • QUALITY-OF-LIFE
  • PULL-UP ESOPHAGECTOMY
  • GASTROESOPHAGEAL-REFLUX
  • RISK-FACTORS
  • INTRATHORACIC STOMACH
  • GASTRIC REPLACEMENT
  • NO DRAINAGE
  • SURGERY
  • FUNDOPLICATION
  • RECONSTRUCTION

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