Poster Session II - A195 COMBINING SYMPTOMS AND ENDOSCOPIC FINDINGS TO PREDICT GERD DIAGNOSED BY 24-HOUR PH MONITORING
Y Han, Y Alotaibi, S Alobaid, A Alhazmi, A A Saqah, L Alrabghi, M Ismail, O Pacyna, N Anwar, R Elzaanoun, M R Jouid, E Ogunsakin, K McIntosh, R Mortuza, R Sedano

TL;DR
This study shows that combining symptoms and endoscopic findings can accurately predict GERD, potentially reducing the need for long wait times for pH monitoring tests.
Contribution
The study introduces a predictive score combining symptoms and endoscopic findings to identify GERD without pH monitoring.
Findings
Heartburn, regurgitation, BMI ≥30, PPI responsiveness, and hiatal hernia are strongly associated with GERD confirmed by pH monitoring.
Patients with all five features had an 80% likelihood of GERD, compared to 33.14% with only one feature.
The predictive score correlates positively with the likelihood of confirmed GERD.
Abstract
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a common gastrointestinal disorder. Although many patients with GERD are diagnosed empirically, some require definitive testing via 24-hour pH monitoring. However, in Southwestern Ontario, there is a long wait time for pH studies. According to the Lyon Consensus, conclusive evidence for GERD includes LA grade B–D esophagitis, Barrett’s esophagus, and peptic strictures. These findings are uncommon during endoscopy and therefore apply to a limited subset of patients. Other endoscopic findings and symptoms alone are insufficient for diagnosis. Previous research has evaluated the predictive ability of these factors individually, but not in combination. We aimed to investigate the predictive value of combined clinical symptoms and endoscopic findings for GERD diagnosis confirmed by 24-hour pH monitoring. We retrospectively analyzed de-identified pH…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment · Eosinophilic Esophagitis
