Gastroparesis is a chronic and debilitating gastric disease associated with poor quality of life, psychological distress, frequent hospitalisations, and high healthcare utilization and associated costs. It is defined by persistent upper gastrointestinal symptoms and delayed gastric emptying with no mechanical gastric outlet obstruction. Gastric emptying scintigraphy (GES) is the current gold standard for diagnosing gastroparesis but its clinical utility is currently being questioned. Current management strategies have often been found to be ineffective, largely due to an incomplete understanding of the disease's pathophysiology. There is a critical need for more advanced diagnostic testing that can better diagnose patients and guide personalized targeted therapy. Body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) using Gastric Alimetry (Alimetry Ltd., New Zealand) is a new FDA-cleared medical device to assess gastric function by non-invasively assessing gastric motility using simultaneous high-resolution electrogastrography and symptom profiling. BSGM has demonstrated clinical utility in the assessment of gastric function through patient phenotyping in a variety of cohorts, including patients with nausea and vomiting disorders, diabetes, delayed gastric emptying, and post-gastric surgery. Previous research revealed that the detection of gastric motility abnormality rates through patient phenotyping were higher using Gastric Alimetry compared to GES (43% vs 23%). Clinical application of these phenotypes has also aided in changing management decisions, which reduced healthcare utilization and associated costs. However, how GES and BSGM test results differentially influence clinical management in patients is uncertain. This exploratory pilot study proposes a two-arm, prospective trial to assess whether BSGM-guided care could change clinical outcomes compared to the standard of care (GES) in patients with suspected gastroparesis. The trial consists of two phases. Phase 1 involves participants separately undertaking a GES and BSGM test. Based on these results, the referring clinician will devise management plans for treatment using a standardized form: 1) unblinded to one test (GES or BSGM) but blinded to the other test; and 2) unblinded to both tests (GES + BSGM). They will be asked to recommend any changes to interventions (medications, diet, endoscopic/surgical referral or other) and additional testing. In phase 2, those in Phase 1 will undergo BSGM-guided care based on their combined management plan (GES + BSGM) and followed up over a 12 month period. A separate set of participants will be recruited to undergo standard of care (GES only) in parallel with Phase 1 participants. After 12 months, those on the standard of care arm will be crossed over to BSGM-guided care, undergo a BSGM test, treated according to the new management plan, and followed up over 6 months. Questionnaires will assess symptoms, quality of life, health psychology, sleep, and work impact. If validated, this may change clinical practice by reducing the need for invasive or radioactive-based procedures to diagnose these patients and facilitating a more targeted treatment approach.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
40
The Gastric Alimetry™ System is intended to record, store, view and process gastric myoelectrical activity as an aid in the diagnosis of various gastric disorders.
Western Sydney University
Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia
RECRUITINGChange in clinical management decisions based on the combined test results.
A change constitutes any change within a category (e.g. from a prokinetic to neuromodulator, from one prokinetic to another), addition of category or removal of category. If the plan remains the same, this is considered no change.
Time frame: Baseline
Healthcare utilization (expressed as work impairment percentages; higher scores meaning worse outcome) between standard of care and BSGM-guided care.
Work impairment scale is Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire: General Health V2.0 (minimum: 0; maximum: 100).
Time frame: 12 months.
Healthcare utilization-associated costs (expressed as the total amount in AUD) between standard of care and BSGM-guided care.
Costs associated with healthcare events (emergency department visits, hospital admissions, gastroenterology clinic visits and investigations) before and after testing.
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in clinical management decisions based on order of unblinding motility test results (GES then BSGM vs BSGM then GES).
A change constitutes any change within a category (e.g. from a prokinetic to neuromodulator, from one prokinetic to another), addition of category or removal of category. If the plan remains the same, this is considered no change. The change will then be compared between unblinding GES then BSGM vs BSGM then GES.
Time frame: Baseline
Change in Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (minimum: 0; maximum: 5) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a higher score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in Patient Assessment of Upper Gastrointestinal Symptom Severity Index (minimum: 0; maximum: 5) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a higher score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in Patient Assessment of Upper GastroIntestinal Disorders-Quality of Life (minimum: 0; maximum: 5) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a lower score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in 5-level EQ-5D (minimum: 0; maximum: 1) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a lower score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in Patient Health Questionnaire-8 (minimum: 0; maximum: 24) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a higher score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in General Anxiety Disorder-7 (minimum: 0; maximum: 21) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a higher score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
Change in Perceived Stress Scale-4 (minimum: 0; maximum: 4) scores between standard of care and BSGM-guided care (with a higher score meaning worse outcome).
Time frame: 12 months.
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