Ont Health Technol Assess Ser. 2006;6(16):1-79. Epub 2006 Aug 1.
The objective of this analysis was to assess the effectiveness, safety and cost-effectiveness of gastric electrical stimulation (GES) for the treatment of chronic, symptomatic refractory gastroparesis and morbid obesity.
GASTROPARESIS - EPIDEMIOLOGY: Gastroparesis (GP) broadly refers to impaired gastric emptying in the absence of obstruction. Clinically, this can range from the incidental detection of delayed gastric emptying in an asymptomatic person to patients with severe nausea, vomiting and malnutrition. Symptoms of GP are nonspecific and may mimic structural disorders such as ulcer disease, partial gastric or small bowel obstruction, gastric cancer, and pancreaticobiliary disorders. Gastroparesis may occur in association with diabetes, gastric surgery (consequence of peptic ulcer surgery and vagotomy) or for unknown reasons (idiopathic gastroparesis). Symptoms include early satiety, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and weight loss. The majority of patients with GP are women. The relationship between upper gastrointestinal symptoms and the rate of gastric emptying is considered to be weak. Some patients with markedly delayed gastric emptying are asymptomatic and sometimes, severe symptoms may remit spontaneously. Idiopathic GP may represent the most common form of GP. In one tertiary referral retrospective series, the etiologies in 146 GP patients were 36% idiopathic, 29% diabetic, 13% postgastric surgery, 7.5% Parkinson's disease, 4.8% collagen vascular disorders, 4.1% intestinal pseudoobstruction and 6% miscellaneous causes. The true prevalence of digestive symptoms in patients with diabetes and the relationship of these symptoms to delayed gastric emptying are unknown. Delayed gastric emptying is present in 27% to 58% of patients with type 1 diabetes and 30% with type 2 diabetes. However, highly variable rates of gastric emptying have been reported in type 1 and 2 diabetes, suggesting that development of GP in patients with diabetes is neither universal nor inevitable. In a review of studies examining gastric emptying in patients with diabetes compared to control patients, investigators noted that in many cases the magnitude of the delay in gastric emptying is modest. GP may occur as a complication of a number of different surgical procedures. For example, vagal nerve injury may occur in 4% to 40% of patients who undergo laparoscopic fundoplication for gastroesophageal reflux disease. The prevalence of severe, refractory GP is scantily reported in the literature. Using data from a past study, it has been estimated that the prevalence of severe, symptomatic and refractory GP in the United States population is 0.017%. Assuming an Ontario population of 13 million, this would correspond to approximately 2,000 people in Ontario having severe, symptomatic, refractory GP. The incidence of severe refractory GP estimated by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is approximately 4,000 per year in the United States. This corresponds to about 150 patients in Ontario. Using expert opinion and FDA data, the incidence of severe refractory GP in Ontario is estimated to be about 20 to 150 per year.
To date, there have been no long-term studies confirming the beneficial effects of maintaining euglycemia on GP symptoms. However, it has been suggested that consistent findings of physiologic studies in healthy volunteers and diabetes patients provides an argument to strive for near-normal blood glucose levels in affected diabetes patients. Dietary measures (e.g., low fibre, low fat food), prokinetic drugs (e.g., domperidone, metoclopramide and erythromycin) and antiemetic or antinausea drugs (e.g, phenothiazines, diphenhydramine) are generally effective for symptomatic relief in the majority of patients with GP. For patients with chronic, symptomatic GP who are refractory to drug treatment, surgical options may include jejunostomy tube for feeding, gastrotomy tube for stomach decompression and pyloroplasty for gastric emptying. Few small studies examined the use of botulinum toxin injections into the pyloric sphincter. However, the contribution of excessive pyloric contraction to GP has been insufficiently defined and there have been no controlled studies of this therapy. Treatment with GES is reversible and may be a less invasive option compared to stomach surgery for the treatment of patients with chronic, drug-refractory nausea and vomiting secondary to GP. In theory, GES represents an intermediate step between treatment directed at the underlying pathophysiology, and the treatment of symptoms. It is based on studies of gastric electrical patterns in GP that have identified the presence of a variety of gastric arrhythmias. Similar to a cardiac pacemaker, it was hypothesized that GES could override the abnormal rhythms, stimulate gastric emptying and eliminate symptoms.
Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) of at last 30 kg/m(2). Morbid obesity is defined as a BMI of at least 40 kg/m(2) or at least 35 kg/m(2) with comorbid conditions. Comorbid conditions associated with obesity include diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemias, obstructive sleep apnea, weight-related arthropathies, and stress urinary incontinence. In the United States, the age-adjusted prevalence of extreme obesity (BMI ≥ 40 kg/m(2)) for adults aged 20 years and older has increased significantly in the population, from 2.9% (1988-1994) to 4.7% (1999-2000). An expert estimated that about 160,000 to 180,000 people are morbidly obese in Ontario.
Diet, exercise, and behavioural therapy are used to help people lose weight. Bariatric surgery for morbid obesity is considered an intervention of last resort for patients who have attempted first-line forms of medical management. Gastric stimulation has been investigated for the treatment of morbid obesity; the intention being to reduce appetite and induce early satiety possibly due to inhibitory effects on gastric motility and effects on the central nervous system (CNS) and hormones related to satiety and/or appetite. Possible advantages to GES for the treatment of morbid obesity include reversibility of the procedure, less invasiveness than some bariatric procedures, e.g., gastric bypass, and less side effects (e.g., dumping syndrome).
Electrical stimulation is delivered via an implanted system that consists of a neurostimulator and 2 leads. The surgical procedure can be performed via either an open or laparoscopic approach. An external programmer used by the physician can deliver instructions to the GES, i.e., adjust the rate and amplitude of stimulation (Figure 1). GES may be turned off by the physician at any time or may be removed. The battery life is approximately 4-5 years For treatment of GP, the GES leads are secured in the muscle of the lower stomach, 10 cm proximal to the pylorus (the opening from the stomach to the intestine), 1 cm apart and connected to an implantable battery-powered neurostimulator which is placed in a small pocket in the abdominal wall For treatment of morbid obesity, GES leads are implanted along the lesser curvature of the stomach where the vagal nerve branches spread, approximately 8 cm proximal to the pylorus. However, the implant positioning of the leads has been variably reported in the literature.
The Enterra Therapy System and the Transcend II Implantable Gastric Stimulation System (Medtronic Inc.) are both licensed as class 3 devices by Health Canada (license numbers 60264 and 66948 respectively). The Health Canada indications for use are: ENTERRA THERAPY SYSTEM: "For use in the treatment of chronic intractable (drug-refractory) nausea and vomiting."
"For use in weight reduction for obese adults with a body mass index greater than 35."The GES device that is licensed by Health Canada for treatment of GP, produces high-frequency GES. Most clinical studies examining GES for GP have used high-frequency (4 times the intrinsic slow wave frequency, i.e., 12 cycles per minute), low energy, short duration pulses. This type of stimulation does not alter gastric muscular contraction and has no effect on slow wave dysrhythmias. The mechanism of action is unclear but it is hypothesized that high-frequency GES may act on sensory fibers directed to the CNS. The GES device licensed by Health Canada for treatment of morbid obesity produces low-frequency GES, which is close to or just above the normal/native gastric slow wave cycle (approximately 3 cycles/min.). This pacing uses low-frequency, high-energy, long-duration pulses to induce propagated slow waves that replace the spontaneous ones. Low-frequency pacing does not invoke muscular contractions. Most studies examining the use of GES for the treatment of morbid obesity use low-frequency GES. Under normal circumstances, the gastric slow wave propagates distally and determines the frequency and propagation direction of gastric peristalsis. Low-frequency GES aims to produce abnormal gastric slow waves that can induce gastric dysrhythmia, disrupt regular propagation of slow waves, cause hypomotility of the stomach, delay gastric emptying, reduce food intake, prolong satiety, and produce weight loss. In the United States, the Enterra Therapy System is a Humanitarian Use Device (HUD), meaning it is a medical device designated by the FDA for use in the treatment of medical conditions that affect fewer than 4,000 individuals per year. The Enterra Therapy System is indicated for "the treatment of chronic, drug- refractory nausea and vomiting secondary to GP of diabetes or idiopathic etiology" (not postsurgical etiologies). GES for morbid obesity has not been approved by the FDA and is for investigational use only in the United States. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
本分析旨在评估胃电刺激(GES)治疗慢性症状性难治性胃轻瘫和病态肥胖的有效性、安全性及成本效益。
胃轻瘫——流行病学:胃轻瘫(GP)广义上指无梗阻情况下胃排空受损。临床上,其范围可从无症状者偶然检测出胃排空延迟到出现严重恶心、呕吐及营养不良的患者。胃轻瘫症状不具特异性,可能类似结构性疾病,如溃疡病、部分胃或小肠梗阻、胃癌及胰胆疾病。胃轻瘫可能与糖尿病、胃部手术(消化性溃疡手术和迷走神经切断术的后果)相关,或病因不明(特发性胃轻瘫)。症状包括早饱、恶心、呕吐、腹痛及体重减轻。大多数胃轻瘫患者为女性。上消化道症状与胃排空速率之间的关系被认为较弱。一些胃排空明显延迟的患者无症状,有时严重症状可能会自发缓解。特发性胃轻瘫可能是最常见的胃轻瘫形式。在一项三级转诊回顾性系列研究中,146例胃轻瘫患者的病因分别为:特发性36%、糖尿病性29%、胃手术后13%、帕金森病7.5%、胶原血管疾病4.8%、肠道假性梗阻4.1%及其他原因6%。糖尿病患者消化症状的真实患病率以及这些症状与胃排空延迟的关系尚不清楚。1型糖尿病患者中27%至58%存在胃排空延迟,2型糖尿病患者中30%存在胃排空延迟。然而,1型和2型糖尿病患者的胃排空速率差异很大,表明糖尿病患者发生胃轻瘫并非普遍或必然现象。在一项对比糖尿病患者与对照患者胃排空情况的研究综述中,研究人员指出,在许多情况下,胃排空延迟的程度较小。胃轻瘫可能是多种不同手术的并发症。例如,接受腹腔镜胃底折叠术治疗胃食管反流病的患者中,4%至40%可能发生迷走神经损伤。文献中关于严重难治性胃轻瘫患病率的报道较少。根据过去一项研究的数据估计,美国人群中严重、有症状且难治性胃轻瘫的患病率为0.017%。假设安大略省有1300万人口,那么安大略省约有20**00人患有严重、有症状、难治性胃轻瘫。美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)估计,美国每年严重难治性胃轻瘫的发病率约为4000例。这相当于安大略省约150例患者。根据专家意见和FDA数据,安大略省严重难治性胃轻瘫的发病率估计约为每年20至150例。
迄今为止,尚无长期研究证实维持血糖正常对胃轻瘫症状有有益影响。然而,有观点认为,健康志愿者和糖尿病患者的生理学研究一致结果为努力使受影响的糖尿病患者血糖水平接近正常提供了依据。饮食措施(如低纤维、低脂肪食物)、促动力药物(如多潘立酮、甲氧氯普胺和红霉素)以及止吐或抗恶心药物(如吩噻嗪类、苯海拉明)通常对大多数胃轻瘫患者的症状缓解有效。对于慢性症状性胃轻瘫且药物治疗无效的患者,手术选择可能包括用于喂养的空肠造口管、用于胃减压的胃造口管以及用于胃排空的幽门成形术。很少有小型研究探讨向幽门括约肌注射肉毒杆菌毒素的应用。然而,幽门过度收缩对胃轻瘫的影响尚未明确界定,且尚无该疗法的对照研究。胃电刺激治疗可逆,与胃手术相比,对于治疗继发于胃轻瘫的慢性药物难治性恶心和呕吐患者,可能是侵入性较小的选择。理论上,胃电刺激代表了针对潜在病理生理学的治疗与症状治疗之间的中间步骤。它基于对胃轻瘫患者胃电模式的研究,该研究已确定存在多种胃节律失常。类似于心脏起搏器,有人推测胃电刺激可克服异常节律,刺激胃排空并消除症状。
病态肥胖——流行病学:肥胖定义为体重指数(BMI)至少为30kg/m²。病态肥胖定义为BMI至少为40kg/m²或至少为35kg/m²且伴有合并症。与肥胖相关的合并症包括糖尿病、高血压、血脂异常、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停、与体重相关的关节病以及压力性尿失禁。在美国,20岁及以上成年人中极端肥胖(BMI≥40kg/m²)的年龄调整患病率在人群中显著增加,从1988 - 1994年的2.9%增至1999 - 2000年的4.7%。一位专家估计,安大略省约有16万至18万人病态肥胖。
饮食、运动和行为疗法用于帮助人们减肥。病态肥胖的减肥手术被认为是尝试一线药物治疗形式的患者的最后手段。胃刺激已被研究用于治疗病态肥胖;目的可能是通过对胃动力的抑制作用以及对中枢神经系统(CNS)和与饱腹感和/或食欲相关的激素的影响来降低食欲并诱导早饱。胃电刺激治疗病态肥胖的可能优点包括该手术可逆、比某些减肥手术(如胃旁路手术)侵入性小以及副作用少(如倾倒综合征)。
电刺激通过植入系统传递,该系统由一个神经刺激器和两根导线组成。手术可通过开放或腹腔镜方式进行。医生使用的外部编程器可向胃电刺激器发送指令,即调整刺激速率和幅度(图1)。胃电刺激器可由医生随时关闭或取出。电池寿命约为4 - 5年。对于胃轻瘫的治疗,胃电刺激导线固定在下腹部肌肉中,距幽门(胃通向肠道的开口)近端10cm处,相距*1cm,并连接到一个植入式电池供电的神经刺激器,该刺激器放置在腹壁的一个小袋中。对于病态肥胖的治疗,胃电刺激导线沿胃小弯植入,此处迷走神经分支分布,距幽门近端约8cm。然而,文献中导线的植入位置报道不一。
Enterra治疗系统和Transcend II植入式胃刺激系统(美敦力公司)均被加拿大卫生部许可为3类设备(许可证编号分别为60264和66948)。加拿大卫生部的使用适应症为:Enterra治疗系统:“用于治疗慢性顽固性(药物难治性)恶心和呕吐。”
Transcend II植入式胃刺激系统:“用于体重指数大于35的肥胖成年人减肥。”加拿大卫生部许可用于治疗胃轻瘫的胃电刺激设备产生高频胃电刺激。大多数研究胃电刺激治疗胃轻瘫的临床研究使用高频(固有慢波频率的4倍,即每分钟12次循环)、低能量、短持续时间脉冲。这种类型的刺激不会改变胃肌肉收缩,对慢波节律失常也无影响。作用机制尚不清楚,但据推测高频胃电刺激可能作用于通向中枢神经系统的感觉纤维。加拿大卫生部许可用于治疗病态肥胖的胃电刺激设备产生低频胃电刺激,接近或略高于正常/天然胃慢波周期(约每分钟3次循环)。这种起搏使用低频、高能量、长持续时间脉冲来诱导传播的慢波,以取代自发慢波。低频起搏不会引发肌肉收缩。大多数研究胃电刺激治疗病态肥胖的研究使用低频胃电刺激。在正常情况下,胃慢波向远端传播并决定胃蠕动的频率和传播方向。低频胃电刺激旨在产生异常胃慢波,可诱发胃节律失常、破坏慢波的正常传播、导致胃动力不足、延迟胃排空、减少食物摄入、延长饱腹感并导致体重减轻。在美国,Enterra治疗系统是一种人道主义使用设备(HUD),这意味着它是一种由FDA指定用于治疗每年影响不到4000人的医疗状况的医疗器械。Enterra治疗系统适用于“治疗继发于糖尿病或特发性病因的胃轻瘫的慢性、药物难治性恶心和呕吐”(不适用于手术后病因)。用于病态肥胖的胃电刺激尚未获得FDA批准,在美国仅用于研究。(摘要截断)