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Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma after Surgery and Medication Against Gastro-Oesophageal Reflux Disease in a Nordic Cohort Study

31 Pages Posted: 21 May 2019

See all articles by John Maret-Ouda

John Maret-Ouda

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Giola Santoni

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Karl Wahlin

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Miia Artama

National Institute for Health and Welfare

Nele Brusselaers

Karolinska Institutet

Martti Färkkilä

University of Helsinki

Elsebeth Lynge

University of Copenhagen

Fredrik Mattsson

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Eero Pukkala

Tampere University

Pål Romundstad

Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Laufey Tryggvadóttir

University of Iceland - Faculty of Medicine

My von Euler-Chelpin

University of Copenhagen

Jesper Lagergren

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

More...

Abstract

Background: Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) increases risk of oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC), but whether antireflux therapy prevents OAC is uncertain. We aimed to clarify this issue and assess potential differences after surgical and medical treatment.

Methods: Multinational, population-based cohort study including individuals with GORD from the five Nordic countries in 1964-2014. The exposure was antireflux surgery or medication and the outcome was OAC. First, OAC risk after antireflux surgery and medication in the cohort was compared with the respective corresponding background population by calculating standardised incidence ratios (SIRs) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs). Second, multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression, providing hazard ratios (HRs) with 95%CIs, was used to compare antireflux surgery with medication in relation to OAC risk.

Findings: Among 942,071 GORD patients, 48,863 underwent surgery and 893,208 received medication. Compared to the background population, OAC risk did not decrease following surgery (SIR=4.90 [95%CI 3.62-6.47] 1-<5 years and SIR=4.57 [95%CI 3.44-5.95] ≥15 years after surgery) or medication (SIR=2.37 [95%CI 2.17-2.59] 1-<5 years and SIR=3.07 [95%CI 2.65-3.54] ≥15 years after medication). Similarly, no decrease was found for patients with severe GORD over time after surgical (SIR=6.09 [95%CI 4.39-8.23] 1-<5 years and SIR=5.27 [95%CI 3.73-7.23] ≥15 years) or medical (SIR=3.61 [95%CI 3.19-4.07] 1-<5 years and SIR=3.82 [95%CI (3.19-4.55] ≥15 years) antireflux therapy. The HRs of OAC were stable over time over time after surgery compared with medication (HR=1.71 [95%CI 1.26-2.33] 1-<5 years and HR=1.69 [95%CI 1.24-2.30] ≥15 years after treatment), and remained stable over time after treatment in participants with severe GORD (HR=1.56 [95%CI 1.11-2.20] 1-<5 years and HR=1.57 [95%CI 1.08-2.26] ≥15 years after treatment).

Interpretation: Medical and surgical treatment of GORD does not seem to reduce OAC risk.

Funding: Nordic Cancer Union, Swedish Cancer Society and Swedish Research Council.

Declaration of Interest: None.

Ethical Approval: All required ethical and data permissions were retrieved from the relevant authorities within each country (The Danish Data Protection Agency; Population Register Centre, National Institute for Health and Welfare, Statistics Finland; The Icelandic Data Protection Authority, The National Bioethics Committee; Regional Ethics Committee, Norway; and Regional Ethics Committee, Sweden).

Keywords: Oesophageal neoplasm; antireflux surgery; fundoplication; antireflux medication; proton pump inhibitor; prevention

Suggested Citation

Maret-Ouda, John and Santoni, Giola and Wahlin, Karl and Artama, Miia and Brusselaers, Nele and Färkkilä, Martti and Lynge, Elsebeth and Mattsson, Fredrik and Pukkala, Eero and Romundstad, Pål and Tryggvadóttir, Laufey and Euler-Chelpin, My von and Lagergren, Jesper, Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma after Surgery and Medication Against Gastro-Oesophageal Reflux Disease in a Nordic Cohort Study (05/15/2019 09:52:21). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3391191 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3391191

John Maret-Ouda

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Solna, 17176
Sweden

Giola Santoni

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Solna, 17176
Sweden

Karl Wahlin

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Solna, 17176
Sweden

Miia Artama

National Institute for Health and Welfare

Helsinki
Finland

Nele Brusselaers

Karolinska Institutet

Granits väg 4
Section for Integrative Physiology
Solna, Stockholm 17171
Sweden

Martti Färkkilä

University of Helsinki

University of Helsinki
Helsinki, FIN-00014
Finland

Elsebeth Lynge

University of Copenhagen

Nørregade 10
Copenhagen, København DK-1165
Denmark

Fredrik Mattsson

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Solna, 17176
Sweden

Eero Pukkala

Tampere University

Tampere, FIN-33101
Finland

Pål Romundstad

Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Høgskoleringen
Trondheim NO-7491, 7491
Norway

Laufey Tryggvadóttir

University of Iceland - Faculty of Medicine

Iceland

My von Euler-Chelpin

University of Copenhagen

Nørregade 10
Copenhagen, København DK-1165
Denmark

Jesper Lagergren (Contact Author)

Karolinska Institutet - Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery ( email )

Solna, 17176
Sweden