Barrett's Oesophagus And Reflux Oesophagitis : Efficacy Of Medical Vs Surgical Management
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$510,750.00
Summary
Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease is very common. In some people it leads to oesophageal cancer, which is increasing in incidence more rapidly than any other cancer in the developed world. Significant resources are required for its diagnosis, surveillance and treatment. There are two main forms of treatment, acid suppressing drugs which may be required for the rest of the person's life, or surgery. The goal of treatment is the control of the symptoms such as heartburn, and the prevention of canc ....Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease is very common. In some people it leads to oesophageal cancer, which is increasing in incidence more rapidly than any other cancer in the developed world. Significant resources are required for its diagnosis, surveillance and treatment. There are two main forms of treatment, acid suppressing drugs which may be required for the rest of the person's life, or surgery. The goal of treatment is the control of the symptoms such as heartburn, and the prevention of cancer. It is relatively easy to determine if the symptoms are controlled, and both medical and surgical treatments do this. It is not as easy to measure if a treatment will reduce the risk of cancer, because it takes so long to develop. We will compare a group of patients with reflux disease treated with drugs with a group treated by surgery. In each group we will take oesophageal tissue before treatment and compare it with similar tissue taken after treatment. We will look for reductions in abnormal cells and genes that are in diseased tissue and are important in the development of cancer. This study will help us understand the mechanisms by which reflux causes damage to the oesophagus and how it ultimately leads to cancer. We will learn if medical or surgical treatment is better in healing the underlying damage in the oesophagus, and which treatment is more likely to prevent cancer developing. It may result in more effective management of reflux in our community and help reduce the number of cases of oesophageal cancer.Read moreRead less
Randomised Controlled Trials Of Laparoscopic Techniques For Antireflux Surgery
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,031,381.00
Summary
Gastro-oesophageal reflux is common, with approximately 10% of Australians now using medication to control symptoms. Many Australians will need this medication for life, unless they undergo surgery. The cost of treating reflux is growing. Since 1992 the annual growth rate of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme expenditure on reflux medication has been 13%, and the annual cost for the treatment of reflux now exceeds $1 billion. Not all patients with reflux are satisfied with medication, as some co ....Gastro-oesophageal reflux is common, with approximately 10% of Australians now using medication to control symptoms. Many Australians will need this medication for life, unless they undergo surgery. The cost of treating reflux is growing. Since 1992 the annual growth rate of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme expenditure on reflux medication has been 13%, and the annual cost for the treatment of reflux now exceeds $1 billion. Not all patients with reflux are satisfied with medication, as some continue to experience symptoms. Surgery is the only treatment which will cure reflux. It has a clear role in the treatment of patients with ongoing symptoms, those who don t want to take tablets, and patients with a large hiatus hernia in whom symptoms occur due to the relocation of the stomach from the abdomen into the chest. Approximately 5,000 Australians per year undergo surgery for reflux. The standard operation achieves a good outcome in approximately 90%, although some patients are troubled by side effects. To reduce the risk of this, the original procedure has been modified. However, the evidence supporting modifications has until recently been limited. The best way to compare different operations is in randomised trials. The majority of the largest and best trials addressing this area have been undertaken in Adelaide. We have already entered 504 patients into 5 randomised trials, 4 conducted entirely in Adelaide, and one across multiple sites with the cooperation of 15 Australasian surgeons. These trials have provided a more reliable evidence base for surgeons undertaking surgery for reflux. However, long term follow-up is required to ensure that conclusions drawn are valid at late follow-up. In addition we are establishing 2 new randomised trials, which will determine how best to perform surgery for reflux, and how best to repair a large hiatus hernia. These studies will be undertaken in collaboration with more than 25 other surgeons throughout Australia.Read moreRead less
Randomised Controlled Trials Of Laparoscopic Techniques For Antireflux Surgery
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$275,923.00
Summary
Gastro-oesophageal reflux is common, and over the last decade there has been an exponential rise in the usage of acid suppressing medication. Current trends suggest that the national cost of medical treatment of reflux will become unaffordable unless new management or preventative strategies can be developed. Presently, surgery is the only treatment which can cure reflux. Laparoscopic fundoplication has recently become an acceptable, low morbidity keyhole surgical treatment for this problem. How ....Gastro-oesophageal reflux is common, and over the last decade there has been an exponential rise in the usage of acid suppressing medication. Current trends suggest that the national cost of medical treatment of reflux will become unaffordable unless new management or preventative strategies can be developed. Presently, surgery is the only treatment which can cure reflux. Laparoscopic fundoplication has recently become an acceptable, low morbidity keyhole surgical treatment for this problem. However, research is essential to develop a procedure which optimizes the outcome for patients undergoing surgical management of reflux, and minimizes the risk of complications. This may provide a better alternative to long term management with acid suppressing medication, and could eventually achieve long term savings to the nation's health budget. Since 1994 research conducted at the Royal Adelaide Hospital has evaluated a range of different key hole operations aimed at improving the outcome for patients undergoing surgery for gastro-oesophageal reflux. Over 100 patients have been entered into each of the following clinical trials: total fundoplication with or without division of the short gastric vessels, total versus anterior partial fundoplication and posterior or anterior hiatal repair. Further trials will compare a lesser degree of anterior partial fundoplication with total fundoplication. A common research protocol has been developed and applied to all of these trials. This involves the use of double blind randomised methodology, with independent follow-up obtained by an independent investigator. These trials will determine the best surgical technique for the surgical correction of reflux, and this should lead to a more widely accepted surgical alternative to existing non-operative strategies for pathological reflux.Read moreRead less
Efficacy Of Ablative Therapies For Barrett's Oesophagus
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$570,148.00
Summary
Some people with severe reflux develop Barrett's oesophagus, which puts them at high risk of developing cancer. Patients with Barrett's can be treated with various endoscopic ablation techniques, but it is not yet know if these treatments prevent the development of cancer. The aims of this work are to use molecular methods to ascertain whether the tissue that regenerates after ablation is normal, and to compare different ablation techniques.
Ablative Therapies For Barrett's Oesophagus - Evaluation Of New Clinical And Experimental Therapies
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$302,310.00
Summary
Barrett's oesophagus arises when repeated episodes of gastro-oesophageal reflux lead to the oesophageal lining undergoing change to a lining more like that of the intestine. This new lining predisposes to cancer, a problem which is rapidly becoming more common. Recent research has focused on techniques which could reverse this process. Destruction (ablation) of Barrett s oesophagus can be followed by regeneration with a normal looking lining. A range of techniques have been used for this. Howeve ....Barrett's oesophagus arises when repeated episodes of gastro-oesophageal reflux lead to the oesophageal lining undergoing change to a lining more like that of the intestine. This new lining predisposes to cancer, a problem which is rapidly becoming more common. Recent research has focused on techniques which could reverse this process. Destruction (ablation) of Barrett s oesophagus can be followed by regeneration with a normal looking lining. A range of techniques have been used for this. However, the behavior of the regenerated lining is unknown, and there still remains potential for cancer. We are currently evaluating endoscopic ablation using Argon Plasma Coagulation within clinical trials. There is also scope for the development of better approaches to ablation. We hypothesize that an suitable liquid has the potential to more evenly and more easily ablate the lining. Delivery of a liquid substance to lower oesophagus can be achieved through a tube which confines liquid to the lower oesophagus. However, to make this approach acceptable it is necessary to determine the best treatment agent, and to test the delivery system. We will first do this using animal models, before future application in patients. A further key issue is whether the cells which repopulate the oesophagus are genetically normal or abnormal. After ablation it is likely that the cells which repopulate the lining are sourced from the same cells which were the source of the abnormal lining, and these cells could inherit genetic alterations. This could increase the risk of cancer. Hence, we plan to assess certain genes in biopsies taken from tissue before and after ablation to determine genetic normality. In Australia endoscopic ablative techniques are currently being introduced into clinical practice without evaluation. Hence the question of whether ablation actually reduces the risk of cancer and how to best perform ablation should be addressed before clinical application becomes widespread.Read moreRead less
Gene Expression And DNA Methylation In Barrett's Oesophagus And Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$383,655.00
Summary
The oesophagus (gullet) is the tube through which food and drinks pass from the mouth to the stomach. In Barrett's oesophagus, the normal lining of the lower oesophagus is replaced by an abnormal type of lining called intestinal metaplasia as a result of severe gastroesophageal reflux. Gastroesophageal reflux is one of the most common of all diseases, affecting up to a quarter of all adults, and Barrett's oesophagus itself occurs in 0.5 - 1% of the adult population. In a minority of patients wit ....The oesophagus (gullet) is the tube through which food and drinks pass from the mouth to the stomach. In Barrett's oesophagus, the normal lining of the lower oesophagus is replaced by an abnormal type of lining called intestinal metaplasia as a result of severe gastroesophageal reflux. Gastroesophageal reflux is one of the most common of all diseases, affecting up to a quarter of all adults, and Barrett's oesophagus itself occurs in 0.5 - 1% of the adult population. In a minority of patients with Barrett's oesophagus, further abnormalities in the cells lining the lower oesophagus occur, leading to dysplasia and adenocarcinoma (glandular cell type cancer). This project will provide the first comprehensive map of two of the most important genetic mechanisms (gene expression and DNA methylation) by which Barrett's oesophagus evolves into Barrett's dysplasia and adenocarcinoma. The specimens studied in this project differ from previous studies in that they are taken from the same patients at different times, as these patients' Barrett's oesophagus either remains stable or progresses to worse disease. Essentially all the known human genes will be studied and the relevance of genes identified as important will be confirmed using highly accurate methods. With this information, it may be possible to develop genetic tests that can predict which patients are at risk of developing worse disease including cancer. In other parts of this project, genes which influence the likelihood of survival for patients with oesophageal adenocarcinoma will be identified, a simple test to more accurately identify patients with cancer spread to lymph nodes may be developed, and a blood test to detect oesophageal adenocarcinoma will be tested.Read moreRead less
Long Term Follow-up Of Randomised Controlled Trials For Laparoscopic Antireflux Surgery
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$712,100.00
Summary
17% of Australians use medication for gastro-oesophageal reflux, with many requiring tablets life long. In >15% this is not adequate. The alternative is surgery which is the only curative treatment for reflux and hiatus hernia. It achieves a good outcome in 90%, although some develop further reflux or side effects. To reduce problems procedures have been modified. In a series of trials we are evaluating long term outcomes for modifications, to determine the best surgical treatment for reflux.