医学
四分位间距
吞咽困难
内科学
吞咽
食管运动障碍
队列
高分辨率测压
类阿片
食管
胃肠病学
麻醉
外科
贲门失弛缓症
受体
作者
Dhyanesh A. Patel,James Goss,Muhammad Hashim Hayat,Claudio Tombazzi,Rishi D. Naik,James C. Slaughter,Muhammad Aslam,Shabnam Sarker,Tina Higginbotham,Michael F. Vaezi
标识
DOI:10.1053/j.gastro.2022.04.051
摘要
Abstract
Background & Aims
Studies with limited sample sizes have investigated association of chronic opioid use with motility disorders of esophagogastric junction and esophageal body peristalsis. Our aims were to use a large cohort of patients to assess (1) the impact of opioid exposure on clinical and manometric characteristics, and (2) the association of opioid exposure with higher long-term symptom burden. Methods
Patients recruited from a tertiary medical center who underwent high-resolution manometry (HRM) between 2007 and 2018 were included. Demographics, opiate exposure, clinical symptoms, and HRM parameters were compared. Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System–Gastrointestinal swallowing domain (PROMIS-GI swallowing domain) and Eckardt score were administered via phone interviews in patients with hypercontractile esophagus (HE) or distal esophageal spasm (DES) to determine long-term symptom burden between opioid and nonopioid users. Results
Our cohort included 4075 patients (869 with opiate exposure with median morphine milligram equivalent [interquartile range] of 30 [10–45]). Patients in the opioid group were significantly more likely to have dysphagia (65% vs 51%, P < .01) and diagnosis of DES (11% vs 5%, P < .01) and HE (9% vs 3%, P < .01). Partial opioid agonists were not associated with motility abnormalities. Patients on opioids had significantly higher symptom burden on median (interquartile range) follow-up of 8.9 years (5.8–10.4) post manometric diagnosis with median PROMIS-GI swallowing domain score of 21.5 (17–25) compared with the nonopioid group at 15 (9.8–21, P = .03). Conclusions
Nearly 2 of 3 patients with opioid exposure undergoing HRM have dysphagia and more than 25% of them with dysphagia as the primary symptom have a diagnosis of either DES or HE. Opioid users with spastic disorders have higher symptom burden long-term compared with nonopioid users.
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