Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01832779

Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy (POEM) for the Treatment of Achalasia

Prospective Evaluation of the Clinical Utility of Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy (POEM)

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
143 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Florida · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Achalasia is a chronic disease of altered esophageal motility with resulting functional obstruction to the passage of food leading to poor quality of life and significant morbidity. The two main treatments available in the US are endoscopic balloon dilation and surgical myotomy. Each therapy has advantages and drawbacks and at present both are considered a first choice approach depending on patient preferences and local expertise. Surgical myotomy provides long lasting improvement in dysphagia but even when done laparoscopically is invasive and complex. Extensive acid reflux resulting in significant morbidity is routinely seen after surgical myotomy and additional anti-reflux operation is typically done at the time of the myotomy. Endoscopic balloon dilation is a simple minimally invasive outpatient procedure but improvement of symptoms tends to be shorter in duration and repeat dilations are commonly needed. Both therapies improve on dysphagia but tend to provide suboptimal control of chest pain which is one of the cardinal symptoms of achalasia. The peroral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) was first introduced in Japan to address the suboptimal results with endoscopic balloon dilation and surgical myotomy. POEM is incisionless minimally invasive but in addition may have some further advantages over surgical myotomy including unlimited length of the myotomy with expected better control of chest pain and preservation of the anatomical anti-reflux barrier (angle of His and the cruse of the diaphragm) with expected lower incidence of acid reflux. In Japan POEM has become the preferred modality for therapy of achalasia due to the excellent results and exceptional safety record. In the US, dedicated POEM devices were approved by the FDA just recently. As a result the bulk of the published data comes from Japan and very little is known regarding outcomes in US population. Therefore the investigators want to prospectively record our experience with POEM as done as part of routine medical care in US population. This will be a data recording study. All patients will receive standard medical care and no experimental interventions will be performed.

Detailed description

Information about the subject's medical history, leading up to the need for an Achalasia treatment, the procedure itself and how the subject does after the procedure, including after the subject gets home, will be collected. This will be done by gathering relevant information from the subject's medical chart and/or by talking with the subject prior to and after the subject's medical procedures. There are no specific study procedures or tests. All information collected is part of the subject's medical care and will be collected even if the subject is not in the study.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERAchalasia subjectsInformation about the subject's medical history, leading up to the need for an Achalasia treatment, the procedure itself and how the subject does after the procedure, including after the subject's gets home, will be collected. This will be done by gathering relevant information from the subject's medical chart and/or by talking with the subject prior to and after your medical procedures. There are no specific study procedures or tests. All information collected is part of the subject's medical care and will be collected even if the subject is not in the study.

Timeline

Start date
2013-03-01
Primary completion
2024-05-01
Completion
2024-05-01
First posted
2013-04-16
Last updated
2024-10-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01832779. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.