Gastroesophageal Reflux Clinical Trial
Official title:
Which Supraesophageal Reflux Symptoms Reliably Respond to PPI Therapy: A Large Simple Trial
The investigators hypothesize that persons with the particular cluster of symptoms that are due to supraesophageal reflux (SER) will have complete resolution of those symptoms with adequate acid suppression when a PPI is administered for 6 months.
Estimates suggest that up to 50% of Voice Clinic patients and 10% of ENT and Pulmonology
outpatients seek medical care for chronic laryngopharyngeal symptoms resulting from
supraesophageal reflux (SER). While many anecdotal and uncontrolled studies have shown
significant clinical benefit with Proton Pump Inhibitors (PPIs), this conclusion has not
been supported in small, randomized, placebo-controlled studies. The recent negative Vaezi
trial (unpublished) was limited by bias introduced in the patient enrollment process due to
reliance on physician diagnosis of SER. This bias became clear during conduction of the
Supraesophageal Reflux Questionnaire (SRQ) Validation Study (Mayo, in press), which
demonstrated that Otolaryngologists vary in their threshold for considering the diagnosis of
SER. This project aims to remove selection bias from the study design.
Hypotheses/Questions: Our underlying assumptions are as follows: SER is due to the passage
of gastric contents into the esophagus; and with adequate acid suppression provided by a
PPI, there is less overall volume available to reflux, which should improve SER. We
hypothesize that persons with the particular cluster of symptoms that are due to SER will
have complete resolution of those symptoms with adequate acid suppression when PPI is
administered for an adequate duration of time.
Primary Aim:
- To determine which symptom(s) (chronic cough, hoarseness, sore throat, globus
sensation, or throat clearing) are completely ameliorated with PPI therapy and hence
reflective of SER.
Secondary Aims:
- To determine which features of a patient's history are predictive of a positive
response to PPI therapy, and which confer lack of response; and
- To develop a scoring system for the SRQ that would predict a diagnosis of SER.
Methods:
Design: Large simple randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of subjects with
chronic laryngopharyngeal symptoms.
Population: Subjects will be recruited from Olmsted County and from General ENT Clinic and
Pulmonary Chronic Cough Clinic.
Inclusion Criteria: Subjects must have at least 1 of 5 chronic (present for at least one
month) and recurrent (at least twice per week) symptoms of interest.
Randomization: A dynamic allocation algorithm will be used by the Mayo Pharmacy to balance
the treatment arms for confounding variables for treatment allocation.
Study Intervention: Either twice daily esomeprazole 40 mg or placebo for 6 months. Beyond a
urine pregnancy test for women of child-bearing age, no other examination is required for
enrollment or participation.
Follow-Up: Subjects will be contacted by phone monthly to assess symptoms, check compliance,
and adverse events.
Primary Outcome: True responders will be those subjects who lack at least one of their
initial symptoms by the 3-month time period, and remain asymptomatic at 4, 5 and 6 months.
Sample Size: Based on previous studies we anticipate a 30-40% placebo response rate at 3
months that will not be sustained at 6 months. We expect roughly 60% to completely respond
to PPI therapy (i.e. 40% do not completely respond). Assuming 140 patients do not completely
respond, we would need 350 patients on PPI therapy. Hence, 70 subjects will be randomized to
receive PPI therapy and 30 randomized to placebo for each symptom group for a total N=500.
Analysis: Logistic regression.
Significance: This project will identify patients with laryngopharyngeal symptoms most
likely to benefit from empiric PPI therapy. Until we have clarified which symptoms best
respond and do not respond to therapy, we are bound to repeat the errors of the past.
Finally, this project will further validate the SRQ for use in future trials.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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