WASHINGTON – Five-year follow-up data on the magnetic device approved for treating gastroesophageal reflux disease confirm its long-term safety and efficacy, Dr. Robert A. Ganz reported at the annual Digestive Disease Week.
Five years after device implantation, the proportion of patients experiencing moderate to severe regurgitation had dropped to about 1%, from almost 60% at baseline, and two-thirds of patients were not taking any proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), said Dr. Ganz, chief of gastroenterology at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, Minneapolis, and one of the study investigators. These were among the results of the study that evaluated the device, the LINX Reflux Management System. The device was approved by the Food and Drug Administration FDA) in 2012 and is for the treatment of people with GERD as defined by abnormal pH testing, who continue to have chronic GERD symptoms that persist despite maximum medical therapy for the treatment of reflux.
“Magnetic sphincter augmentation should be considered first-line surgical therapy for those with gastroesophageal reflux disease, based on the results of this study,” he said.
The 2-year results of the prospective, multicenter study were the basis of the FDA approval of the device, described by the manufacturer, Torax Medical, as a “small implant [composed] of interlinked titanium beads with magnetic cores,” implanted during standard laparoscopy. The magnetic attraction between the beads augments the existing esophageal sphincter’s barrier function to prevent reflux,” according to the company.
The study enrolled 100 patients with reflux disease with a median age of 53 years, who had experienced typical heartburn for at least 6 months with or without regurgitation and were taking PPIs daily for at least 3 months (median use 5 years). Patients had GERD for a median of 10 years (range: 1-40 years). People who had any type of previous gastric or esophageal surgery, Barrett’s esophagus, a hiatal hernia greater than 3 cm, a body mass index over 35 kg/m2, or grade C or D esophagitis were excluded.
The device was implanted in all patients, who served as their own controls; 85 patients were followed through 5 years (6 were lost to follow-up, the device was explanted in 6 patients, 2 patients did not consent to extended follow-up, and 1 patient died of an unrelated cancer). The median procedure time was 36 minutes with a range of 7-125 minutes); all procedures were successfully completed with no intraoperative complications and all patients were discharged within 24 hours on an unrestricted diet.
The median total Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease–Health-Related Quality of Life (GERD-HRQL) score at baseline was 27 points among those not on PPIs and 11 points on PPIs, dropping to 4 points at 5 years off PPIs. At baseline, 95% of patients expressed dissatisfaction related to reflux, which dropped to 7% at year 5. Moderate to severe heartburn was reported by 89% at baseline, dropping to about 12% at year 5. The proportion of patients experiencing moderate to severe regurgitation dropped from 57% at baseline to about 1% at 5 years, Dr. Ganz said.
At baseline, 100% were taking PPIs every day, compared with 15% at 5 years. (At 5 years, 75% had discontinued PPIs, and about 9% reported PRN use only). Grade A and B esophagitis decreased from 40% at baseline to 16% at 5 years, at which point most cases were grade A, and there were no patients with grade C or D esophagitis, he said. In addition, at 5 years, 100% of patients “reported the ability to belch, and those needing to vomit – about 16% – reported the ability to vomit,” demonstrating that normal physiology was preserved with the device.
At 5 years, there were no device erosions or migrations, or any significant adverse events other than dysphagia, which “was typically mild and not associated with weight loss and tended to resolve over time,” from about 70% in the first few weeks after surgery to 11% at 1 year and 7% at 5 years, Dr. Ganz said.
In seven cases, the device was removed laparoscopically, with no complications and gastric anatomy was preserved for future treatments. All removals were elective. The device was removed in four patients because of dysphagia, which completely resolved in those patients. One patient had the device removed because of vomiting of unknown cause that persisted after removal. Another two patients who “had the device removed for disease management” continued to experience reflux and had “uneventful” Nissen fundoplication,” he said.
“Five years after magnetic augmentation, we have demonstrated objective evidence of reduction in acid exposure and in the majority of patients, normalized pH [and] we demonstrated significant and durable improvement in all group parameters measured, with preservation of fundic anatomy and normal physiology, with the ability to belch and vomit,” Dr. Ganz concluded. The results also show that the “procedure is reproducible, safe and reversible if necessary,” he added, noting that one of the limitations of the study was that subjects served as their own controls. During the discussion period, he was asked about hiatal hernia repairs, an apparent trend to “decay” from years 1 to 5 in some parameters measured, and dysphagia after the procedure.