G-POEM shows 63.5% clinical success at 6 months for refractory gastroparesis after esophagectomy
This multicenter retrospective cohort study evaluated gastric peroral endoscopic pyloromyotomy (G-POEM) in 108 patients with refractory gastroparesis following esophagectomy, confirmed by scintigraphy, across 18 expert centers. The population had a median age of 65 years, was 75% male, and the primary esophagectomy indication was adenocarcinoma (75.5%). No comparator group was reported.
The primary outcome was treatment success at 6 months, defined as a ≥50% decrease in the Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (GCSI) score. At 6 months, 63.5% of patients achieved clinical success (95% CI 54.1% to 72.0%). The mean GCSI score decreased from 2.9 pre-procedure (95% CI 2.7 to 3.1) to 1.2 post-procedure (95% CI 1.0 to 1.4). Success rates were 54.9% at 12 months and 66.1% at 24 months, though confidence intervals were not reported for these later time points.
Minor adverse events occurred in 2.8% of cases. Serious adverse events, discontinuations, and tolerability were not reported. Key limitations include the retrospective, observational design and the lack of a control group, which prevents causal inference. Funding and conflicts of interest were not reported. For practice, these data from expert centers suggest G-POEM may be a viable procedural option in this challenging patient population, but the evidence remains preliminary.