The gastric electrical neurostimulator (Enterra; Medtronic, Inc.) is approved for treatment of idiopathic and diabetic gastroparesis that is refractory to medical treatment, performed on a compassionate basis. Patients with diabetic gastroparesis respond to GES better than do patients with the idiopathic form. Of the symptoms of gastroparesis, primarily nausea and vomiting improve. Thus, GES favors patients with diabetic gastroparesis who have primarily nausea and vomiting, rather than, for instance, patients with idiopathic gastroparesis who have primarily abdominal pain and may be taking narcotics. Some centers provide GES for postsurgical patients and children with gastroparesis.
The 3 main surgical interventions for medically refractory gastroparesis are GES, pyloric intervention (pyloroplasty or pyloromyotomy), and gastrectomy. Of the 3 interventions, gastrectomy is the most radical given its dramatic effect on anatomy and is thus not preferred. The clinical decision then becomes: GES, pyloric intervention, or both? There are limited data to support a definitive answer to this question.
In a single-center retrospective analysis of prospective data (electronic medical record), Arthur et al compared outcomes of GES patients with medically refractory gastroparesis who received various surgical interventions.72 In total, 33 stimulator, 7 pyloroplasty, 2 gastrectomy, and 16 combined stimulator and pyloroplasty patients were analyzed for postoperative symptom improvement. Pyloroplasty alone demonstrated the least symptom improvement, combination GES and pyloroplasty demonstrated increased improvement, and GES alone demonstrated the most improvement. The results of this study suggest that barring contraindication, placement of a gastric stimulator as the initial treatment is best, with pyloroplasty reserved for patients who do not achieve adequate symptom control. Limitations of the study include its single-center design and low patient numbers for pyloroplasty in isolation.
In contrast, a recent retrospective systematic review synthesized the outcomes of various studies of GES and pyloric interventions for medically refractory gastroparesis.73 A therapeutic effect was found for each surgical intervention, with pyloric surgery patients demonstrating a greater response to intervention than GES patients. Unfortunately, attempts to analyze combination interventions were hindered by a lack of power.
Conclusion
Initial management of gastroparesis is medical (lifestyle and diet changes), with antiemetic and prokinetic agents used in refractory cases. Following failure of this therapy, placement of a GES device is a surgical intervention that has been approved under FDA humanitarian device exemption to help ameliorate symptomatology. Improvement with GES has been demonstrated in nonblinded studies, but the lack of randomized controlled trials demonstrating benefit suggests the possibility of an underlying placebo effect. Additionally, new medical procedures such as G-POEM complicate the decision of which intervention should be attempted first. More studies, specifically comparing GES, pyloric interventions, and combined GES with pyloric intervention to placebo, are needed to fully understand what therapy is best for refractory gastroparesis.
Corresponding author: Henry P. Parkman, MD, Gastroenterology Section, Temple University School of Medicine, 3401 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19140; henry.parkman@temple.edu.