When treating persistent heartburn from gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) that does not respond to conventional treatment (a class of medications called proton pump inhibitors), it is important to be able to distinguish between erosive GERD and non-erosive GERD (called NERD). Currently the best method the investigators have to make this distinction is esophageal 24-hour pH and impedance testing. The test involves inserting a catheter into the esophagus through the nose and having the catheter maintained in this position for 24 hours This test is invasive, can be uncomfortable, and it is expensive and time consuming. The investigators are hoping that image enhanced technology will identify characteristics that are found more commonly in patients with non-erosive GERD compared to controls and therefore provide evidence that may allow us to replace pH and impedance testing with the image enhanced endoscopy as the best way to diagnose NERD. Participants will be either patients undergoing an upper endoscopy as part of their standard clinical evaluation for heartburn that does not respond to PPIs or patients undergoing standard clinical evaluation endoscopy for other reasons.
Evaluation of the utility of image-enhanced endoscopy (IEE) in the diagnosis of non-erosive reflux disease (NERD), defined as heartburn documented to be associated with reflux on impedance-pH testing in the absence of erosions on standard white-light endoscopy (WLE) during initial endoscopy. The investigators will examine the following characteristics for IEE sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive values, and negative predictive value: squamo-columnar junction (SCJ) vascularity, micro-erosions, SCJ pit pattern, and combinations of these characteristics. The investigators will also look at abnormal morphology of intra-papillary capillary loops (IPCLS) using the newer generation Narrow Band Light (NBI-190 endoscopes and assess the identification of their presence using I-scan. Additionally, the investigators will examine real-time diagnostic yield of reflux diseases by IEE (in vivo diagnosis of reflux disease) and analyze obtained images and results to calculate inter-observer agreement. IEE utilized will be commonly available I-scan (Pentax) and Narrow Band Imaging (Olympus). Consecutive patients who meet eligibility criteria and are scheduled for upper endoscopy at locations specified in this record will be invited to participate.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
90
All interventions are standard of care and both controls and cases will be treated the same. IEE results from controls and cases will be compared.
Yale New Haven Hospital
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
VACHS
West Haven, Connecticut, United States
Squamo-columnar junction vascularity (graded as present or absent by endoscopist using IEE)
Time frame: Once--at endoscopy
Presence or absence of micro-erosions identified by endoscopist using IEE
Time frame: Once at endoscopy
Squamo-columnar junction pit pattern (graded as round or non-round by endoscopist using IEE)
Time frame: Once at endoscopy
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.