4.0 Article

Clinical presentation and therapeutic outcome of patients with jackhammer esophagus-a multicenter cohort study in Japan

Journal

ESOPHAGUS
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 393-400

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10388-022-00916-7

Keywords

Esophageal motility disorders; Dysphagia; Chest pain; Manometry; Eosinophilic esophagus

Funding

  1. Diversity Promotion Center Joint Research Promotion Project

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This study investigated the clinical presentation and therapeutic data of patients with Jackhammer esophagus (JE) in Japan. The results showed a low prevalence of JE, with dysphagia being the most common symptom. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy and esophagography revealed some characteristic features of JE. Some patients experienced symptom improvement without invasive treatments.
Background Jackhammer esophagus (JE) is a hypercontractile esophageal motility disorder diagnosed using high-resolution manometry (HRM). We sought to determine the clinical presentation and therapeutic data of patients with JE in Japan. Methods The study included patients with JE, diagnosed through HRM performed for suspicious esophageal motility disorders. Demographics, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, radiology, and therapy data were collected from patient charts. Results Among the 4,412 HRM tests performed, 89 patients (61.6 +/- 13.4 years; 64 males, 25 females) were diagnosed with JE (2.0%). Dysphagia was the most frequent symptom (80%), followed by chest pain (40%) and heartburn (25%). Esophagogastroduodenoscopy showed abnormal findings in 32% of patients: corkscrew/rosary beads appearance in 26%, narrowing in 11%. Eosinophilic infiltration (> 15 eosinophils/high power field) was diagnosed in 21%. Esophagography showed abnormal findings in 9% of the patients. For the initial therapy, 47 patients received medical treatment followed by peroral endoscopic myotomy (21 patients) and laparoscopic myotomy (two patients). Thirteen patients did not receive any treatment and 10 of those (77%) reported spontaneous resolution of symptoms. Patients who required invasive treatment experienced severe disability in their quality of life and greater maximal distal contractile integral than those who did not. Conclusions HRM showed that the prevalence of JE was very low (2%). Esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed some characteristic features of JE in patients. Some patients showed improvement of symptoms without invasive treatments. Follow-up with/without medical treatment should be considered before performing invasive treatment in patients whose distal contractile integral is relatively low and the quality of life is not impaired.

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