Long-Lasting Dissociation of Esophageal Eosinophilia and Symptoms Following Dilation in Adults with Eosinophilic Esophagitis

Abstract

Background and aims Esophageal dilation improves dysphagia but not inflammation in eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) patients. We investigated if dilation modifies the association between symptoms and esophageal eosinophil count (eos/hpf). Methods Adults enrolled in a multisite, prospective Consortium of Gastrointestinal Eosinophilic Disease Researchers OMEGA observational study (NCT02523118) completed the symptom-based EoE activity index (EEsAI) patient-reported outcome instrument and underwent endoscopy with biopsies. Patients were stratified based on dilation status as absent, performed ≤1 and >1 year before endoscopy. Assessments included Spearman’s correlations of the relationship between symptoms and eos/hpf and linear regression with EEsAI as the outcome, eos/hpf as predictor, and interaction for dilation and eos/hpf. Results Amongst 100 patients (n=61 male, median age 37 years), 15 and 40 patients underwent dilation ≤1 year and >1 year before index endoscopy, respectively. In non-dilated patients, association between eos/hpf and symptoms was moderate (Rho=0.49, p-value<0.001); for 10 eos/hpf increase, the predicted EEsAI increased by 2.69 (p-value=0.002). In patients dilated ≤1 and >1 year before index endoscopy, this association was abolished (Rho=-0.38, p-value=0.157 for ≤1 year and Rho=0.02, p-value=0.883 >1 year); for 10 eos/hpf increase, the predicted EEsAI changed by -1.64 (p-value=0.183) and 0.78 (p-value=0.494), respectively). Dilation modifies association between symptoms and eos/hpf (p-value=0.005 and p-value=0.187 for interaction terms of eos/hpf and dilation ≤1 year and >1 year before index endoscopy, respectively). Conclusion In non-dilated EoE adults, eos/hpf correlates modestly with symptoms; this correlation was no longer appreciated in dilated patients, and the dilation effects lasted longer than one year. Dilation status should be considered in studies evaluating EoE treatment and for clinical follow-up.

Description
item.page.description.tableofcontents
item.page.relation.haspart
Cite As
Safroneeva, E., Pan, Z., King, E., Martin, L. J., Collins, M. H., Yang, G.-Y., Capocelli, K. E., Arva, N. C., Abonia, J. P., Atkins, D., Bonis, P. A., Dellon, E. S., Falk, G. W., Gonsalves, N., Gupta, S. K., Hirano, I., Leung, J., Menard-Katcher, P. A., Mukkada, V. A., … Furuta, G. T. (2021). Long-Lasting Dissociation of Esophageal Eosinophilia and Symptoms Following Dilation in Adults with Eosinophilic Esophagitis. Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cgh.2021.05.049
ISSN
1542-3565
Publisher
Series/Report
Sponsorship
Major
Extent
Identifier
Relation
Journal
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology
Source
Author
Alternative Title
Type
Article
Number
Volume
Conference Dates
Conference Host
Conference Location
Conference Name
Conference Panel
Conference Secretariat Location
Version
Author's manuscript
Full Text Available at
This item is under embargo {{howLong}}