TY - JOUR
T1 - The Brief Esophageal Dysphagia Questionnaire shows better discriminative capacity for clinical and manometric findings than the Eckardt score
T2 - Results from a multicenter study
AU - Cisternas, Daniel
AU - Taft, Tiffany
AU - Carlson, Dustin A.
AU - Glasinovic, Esteban
AU - Monrroy, Hugo
AU - Rey, Paula
AU - Hani, Albis
AU - Ardila-Hani, Andres
AU - Leguizamo, Ana Maria
AU - Bilder, Claudio
AU - Ditaranto, Andres
AU - Varela, Amanda
AU - Agotegaray, Joaquin
AU - Remes-Troche, Jose Maria
AU - de León, Antonio Ruiz
AU - de la Serna, Julio Pérez
AU - Marin, Ingrid
AU - Serra, Jordi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Introduction: Grading dysphagia is crucial for clinical management of patients. The Eckardt score (ES) is the most commonly used for this purpose. We aimed to compare the ES with the recently developed Brief Esophageal Dysphagia Questionnaire (BEDQ) in terms of their correlation and discriminative capacity for clinical and manometric findings and evaluate the effect of gastroesophageal reflux symptoms on both. Methods: Symptomatic patients referred for high-resolution manometry (HRM) were prospectively recruited from seven centers in Spain and Latin America. Clinical data and several scores (ES, BEDQ, GERDQ) were collected and contrasted to HRM findings. Standard statistical analysis was performed. Key Results: 426 patients were recruited, 31.2% and 41.5% being referred exclusively for dysphagia and GERD symptoms, respectively. Both BEDQ and ES were independently associated with achalasia. Only BEDQ was independently associated with being referred for dysphagia and with relevant HRM findings. ROC curve analysis for achalasia diagnosis showed AUC of 0.809 for BEDQ and 0.765 for ES, with the main difference being higher BEDQ sensitivity (80.0% vs 70.8% for ES). GERDQ independently predicted ES but not BEDQ. In the absence of dysphagia (BEDQ = 0), GERD symptoms significantly determine ES. Conclusions and Inferences: Our study suggests both the BEDQ and ES can complementarily describe symptomatic burden in achalasia. BEDQ has several advantages over the ES in the dysphagia evaluation, basically due to its higher sensitivity for manometric diagnosis and independence of GERD symptoms. ES should be used as an achalasia-specific metric, while BEDQ is a better symptom-generic evaluating tool.
AB - Introduction: Grading dysphagia is crucial for clinical management of patients. The Eckardt score (ES) is the most commonly used for this purpose. We aimed to compare the ES with the recently developed Brief Esophageal Dysphagia Questionnaire (BEDQ) in terms of their correlation and discriminative capacity for clinical and manometric findings and evaluate the effect of gastroesophageal reflux symptoms on both. Methods: Symptomatic patients referred for high-resolution manometry (HRM) were prospectively recruited from seven centers in Spain and Latin America. Clinical data and several scores (ES, BEDQ, GERDQ) were collected and contrasted to HRM findings. Standard statistical analysis was performed. Key Results: 426 patients were recruited, 31.2% and 41.5% being referred exclusively for dysphagia and GERD symptoms, respectively. Both BEDQ and ES were independently associated with achalasia. Only BEDQ was independently associated with being referred for dysphagia and with relevant HRM findings. ROC curve analysis for achalasia diagnosis showed AUC of 0.809 for BEDQ and 0.765 for ES, with the main difference being higher BEDQ sensitivity (80.0% vs 70.8% for ES). GERDQ independently predicted ES but not BEDQ. In the absence of dysphagia (BEDQ = 0), GERD symptoms significantly determine ES. Conclusions and Inferences: Our study suggests both the BEDQ and ES can complementarily describe symptomatic burden in achalasia. BEDQ has several advantages over the ES in the dysphagia evaluation, basically due to its higher sensitivity for manometric diagnosis and independence of GERD symptoms. ES should be used as an achalasia-specific metric, while BEDQ is a better symptom-generic evaluating tool.
KW - achalasia
KW - Brief Esophageal Dysphagia Questionnaire
KW - dysphagia evaluation
KW - Eckardt score
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85111870027&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/nmo.14228
DO - 10.1111/nmo.14228
M3 - Article
C2 - 34342075
AN - SCOPUS:85111870027
SN - 1350-1925
VL - 34
JO - Neurogastroenterology and Motility
JF - Neurogastroenterology and Motility
IS - 4
M1 - e14228
ER -