This research is being done to see if the investigators can use the cytosponge or esophacap (depending on availability) to determine if shorter duration SFED (two weeks versus six weeks) would have equal results.
Dietary therapy has been shown to be successful in the treatment of adult and pediatric patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE). Dietary studies were initially reported in children, but the results appear to be similar in adult patients. Elemental diets are successful in 70-95% of patients but are poorly tolerated. The six food elimination diet (SFED) involves the elimination of the six most common food allergens (i.e. milk, wheat, soy, eggs, nuts, and fish) for six weeks and has become the mainstay of dietary therapy in EoE. A six week SFED has demonstrated excellent efficacy and durability in both pediatric and adult EoE. However, compliance with the SFED for a total of six weeks can be challenging for patients. Previous studies have found the esophageal sponge to be an accurate technique of accessing esophageal eosinophilia in EoE . The sponge is swallowed as a 12 mm capsule on a string. The capsule rapidly dissolves upon entering the stomach and the sponge then expands and can be pulled out the mouth five minutes after ingestion. In previous studies, the procedure was very well tolerated and all patients preferred the sponge to endoscopy. Therefore the sponge is a well tolerated, inexpensive, very low risk procedure that would be an ideal option to replace EGD esophageal sampling in the evaluation of dietary treatment of EoE. Although initially described as a six week trial, it is possible that a shorter duration food elimination diet of 2 or 4 weeks would have equal efficacy. This would have important implications for patients as it would make the diet more tolerable.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Patients undergoing the six food elimination diet will be monitored during the initial elimination period at 2, 4 and 6 weeks with swallowing the cytosponge. This is a ten minute procedure in the office. The cytosponge will be sent to the lab for histology reading of the eosinophilic count.
During the initial 6 week elimination period, participants will eliminate the 6 most common food allergens from their diet (fish, nuts, eggs, soy, wheat, dairy). Participants will return for the cytosponge during this time at 2, 4 and 6 weeks of elimination.
This is a short questionnaire to assess the participants swallowing. This will be completed at baseline and during each cytosponge visit during the initial elimination period (2, 4, 6 weeks).
Mayo Clinic in Rochester
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Cytosponge pathology: number of Eosinophils directing dietary therapy
Patients will swallow the cytosponge at 2 weeks, 4 weeks and 6 weeks into the initial period of the 6 food elimination diet. Eosinophils \<15 phf will be considered histologic remission to dietary therapy. This response will be compared to the 6 week visit sponge eosinophilic histology.
Time frame: 2 years
Eosinophilic Esophgitis Activity Index Pro (EEsAI Pro)
The EEsAI Pro uses the VDQ is visual dysphagia question AMS is avoidance, modification, slow eating question. Thes two along with questions on frequency of, duration of, pain associated with dysphagia make up the PRO (patient reported outcomes). The PRO is a number (0-100) calculated from the answer to the questions. A PRO\<20 defines asymptomatic EoE.
Time frame: 2 years
The tolerability of esophageal sponge compared to upper endoscopy with biopsy.
Patients return at the end of the 6 weeks initial elimination of the diet will complete the modified Likert scoring scale. This scale rates participant experience of the cytosponge versus the upper endoscopy. This is a short questionnaire for patients to compare their experiences swallowing the cytosponge versus completing an upper endoscopy. The scale is rated from "worst experience" to "best experience."
Time frame: 6 weeks
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
This is a short questionnaire for patients to compare their experiences swallowing the cytosponge versus completing an upper endoscopy. The scale is rated from "worst experience" to "best experience."