Clinical outcomes of peroral endoscopic myotomy with and without septotomy for management of epiphrenic diverticula: an international multicenter experience (with video).

Journal: Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
Published:
Abstract

Objective: There are few data favoring the need for septotomy at the time of peroral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) or if POEM alone is sufficient. Our aim was to compare POEM outcomes with and without septotomy (POEM+S or POEM-S) in patients with symptomatic epiphrenic diverticula (ED) and an underlying motility disorder.

Methods: This was an international, multicenter retrospective study involving 21 centers between January 2014 and January 2023. Patients with ED and an underlying motility disorder who underwent POEM were included. The primary outcome was clinical success (Eckardt score [ES] ≤3 or a 1-point drop in ES for patients with baseline ES <3) without the need for repeat surgical/endoscopic interventions during follow-up.

Results: A total of 85 patients (mean age, 64.29 ± 17.1 years; 32 [37.6%] female) with ED and underlying motility disorder underwent POEM+S (n = 47) or POEM-S (n = 38). Patients in the POEM+S group had a significantly higher mean pre-POEM ES (7.3 ± 2.1 vs 5.8 ± 2; P = .002). The most common indication for POEM was achalasia (51% in the POEM+S cohort and 51.8% in the POEM-S cohort; P = .7). A posterior approach was favored in the POEM+S group (76.6% vs 52.6%; P = .02). A similar rate of technical success was seen in both groups (97.9% vs 100%; P = .1). The rate of adverse events was similar between the 2 cohorts (4.2% vs 8.1%; P = .6). The median length of hospital stay after POEM-S was significantly longer compared with POEM+S (2 days [interquartile range (IQR), 1-4 days] vs 1 day [IQR, 1-2 days]; P = .005). Clinical success was equivalent between the 2 groups (83% vs 86.8%; P = .6) at a median follow-up duration of 8 months (IQR, 3-19 months).

Conclusions: In patients with ED and an underlying motility disorder, both POEM+S and POEM-S are equally safe and effective, with similar procedure duration and a low recurrence rate at short-term follow-up. Future comparative prospective studies with long-term follow-up are required to validate these findings.

Authors
Apurva Shrigiriwar, Shruti Mony, Farimah Fayyaz, Manabu Onimaru, Marc Monachese, Linda Zhang, Felix Corre, Padmini Azmeera, Hoover Wu, Clement Chun Wu, Kevin Choi, Ashish Gandhi, Divya Chalikonda, Margaret Keane, Bachir Ghandour, Jose Villamarin Corrales, Alexander Schlachterman, Ricardo Tinto, Fermin Arévalo, Eduardo Arbizu, Amol Bapaye, Vic Velanovich, Jose Nieto, Rishi Pawa, Swati Pawa, Jayanta Samanta, Alireza Sedarat, Nikolaos Eleftheriadis, Payal Saxena, Robert Bechara, Mohammad Al Haddad, Pietro Familiari, Michael Ujiki, Mohan Ramchandani, Maximilien Barret, Kenneth Chang, Frédéric Moll, Mathieu Pioche, Haruhiro Inoue, Mouen Khashab