Clinical consequences of nonadherence to Barrett’s esophagus surveillance recommendations: a Multicenter prospective cohort study

Author:

Roumans Carlijn A M12,van der Bogt Ruben D1,Nieboer Daan2,Steyerberg Ewout W23,Rizopoulos Dimitris4,Lansdorp-Vogelaar Iris2,Biermann Katharina5,Bruno Marco J1,Spaander Manon C W1

Affiliation:

1. University Medical Center Rotterdam Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Erasmus MC, , Rotterdam, The   Netherlands

2. University Medical Center Rotterdam Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, , Rotterdam, The   Netherlands

3. Leiden University Medical Center Department of Biomedical Data Sciences, , Leiden, The   Netherlands

4. University Medical Center Rotterdam Department of Biostatistics, Erasmus MC, , Rotterdam, The   Netherlands

5. University Medical Center Rotterdam Department of Pathology, Erasmus MC, , Rotterdam, The   Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Half of Barrett’s esophagus (BE) surveillance endoscopies do not adhere to guideline recommendations. In this multicenter prospective cohort study, we assessed the clinical consequences of nonadherence to recommended surveillance intervals and biopsy protocol. Data from BE surveillance patients were collected from endoscopy and pathology reports; questionnaires were distributed among endoscopists. We estimated the association between (non)adherence and (i) endoscopic curability of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), (ii) mortality, and (iii) misclassification of histological diagnosis according to a multistate hidden Markov model. Potential explanatory parameters (patient, facility, endoscopist variables) for nonadherence, related to clinical impact, were analyzed. In 726 BE patients, 3802 endoscopies were performed by 167 endoscopists. Adherence to surveillance interval was 16% for non-dysplastic (ND)BE, 55% for low-grade dysplasia (LGD), and 54% of endoscopies followed the Seattle protocol. There was no evidence to support the following statements: longer surveillance intervals or fewer biopsies than recommended affect endoscopic curability of EAC or cause-specific mortality (P > 0.20); insufficient biopsies affect the probability of NDBE (OR 1.0) or LGD (OR 2.3) being misclassified as high-grade dysplasia/EAC (P > 0.05). Better adherence was associated with older patients (OR 1.1), BE segments ≤ 2 cm (OR 8.3), visible abnormalities (OR 1.8, all P ≤ 0.05), endoscopists with a subspecialty (OR 3.2), and endoscopists who deemed histological diagnosis an adequate marker (OR 2.0). Clinical consequences of nonadherence to guidelines appeared to be limited with respect to endoscopic curability of EAC and mortality. This indicates that BE surveillance recommendations should be optimized to minimize the burden of endoscopies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Gastroenterology,General Medicine

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