Clinical utility of Gastric Alimetry® in the management of intestinal failure patients with possible underlying gut motility disorders

24 Pages Posted: 15 Feb 2023

See all articles by Chris Varghese

Chris Varghese

University of Auckland - Department of Surgery

William Xu

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Charlotte Daker

Independent

Ian P. Bissett

University of Auckland - Department of Surgery

Chris Cederwall

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Date Written: February 15, 2023

Abstract

[Background/Aims
Gut dysmotility is an increasingly common contributor to intestinal failure. However, differentiating true cases of severe dysmotility requiring intensive nutritional support from other causes of symptoms (e.g., gut-brain or visceral hypersensitivity disorders) is clinically challenging. Reliable motility tests are not widely accessible and may be non-contributory, while transit studies can be labile and insensitive for neuromuscular pathologies.
Methods
Gastric Alimetry® (Alimetry, New Zealand) is a new test of gastric function that was recently shown to define patient subgroups with neuromuscular dysfunction in chronic nausea and vomiting syndromes. Here, we report the first application of Gastric Alimetry to a cohort of adult patients established on PN for a possible GI motility disorder.
Results
Ten patients with diagnostic uncertainty were evaluated, nine on PN, one recently weaned due to a line infection. Gastric Alimetry evaluation was found to contribute to management decisions in all 10 cases, with clinical diagnoses being updated in 6/10, primarily to refocus on disorders of gut-brain interaction in subjects with normal tests. Changed management based on test results facilitated successful weaning of PN in 6/9 patients at median 5 months of follow-up, due to effective targeted pharmacological therapy and integrated care.
Conclusions
These data support the role of Gastric Alimetry in the work-up of possible intestinal failure patients with suspected motility disorders, with utility in diagnosis and management. Test results facilitated gut rehabilitation, reduced PN dependence, and therefore reduced healthcare costs (estimated at >NZ$100,000 per PN patient per year in nutritional support alone).]

Keywords: [Intestinal failure, parenteral nutrition, body surface gastric mapping, enteral feeding, dysmotility] 

JEL Classification: [Intestinal failure, parenteral nutrition, body surface gastric mapping]

Suggested Citation

Varghese, Chris and Xu, William and Daker, Charlotte and Bissett, Ian P. and Cederwall, Chris, Clinical utility of Gastric Alimetry® in the management of intestinal failure patients with possible underlying gut motility disorders (February 15, 2023). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4360266

Chris Varghese (Contact Author)

University of Auckland - Department of Surgery

New Zealand

William Xu

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Charlotte Daker

Independent

Ian P. Bissett

University of Auckland - Department of Surgery ( email )

Private Bag 92019
Auckland Mail Centre
Auckland, 1142
New Zealand

Chris Cederwall

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
57
Abstract Views
515
PlumX Metrics