TY - JOUR
T1 - The lyon score
T2 - A novel reflux scoring system based on the lyon consensus 2.0 that associates with treatment outcome from anti-reflux therapy
AU - Gyawali, C. Prakash
AU - Marchetti, Lorenzo
AU - Rogers, Benjamin D.
AU - Chan, Walter W.
AU - Wong, Ming Wun
AU - Visaggi, Pierfrancesco
AU - Rengarajan, Arvind
AU - Carlson, Dustin A.
AU - Savarino, Edoardo
AU - De Bortoli, Nicola
AU - Chen, Chien Lin
AU - Pandolfino, John
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 by The American College of Gastroenterology.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Background:We explored if a score derived from parameters from esophageal testing could increase confidence in diagnosing conclusive gastroesophageal reflux disease and in predicting outcome.Methods:A prediction score was developed using metrics based on Lyon Consensus 2.0 thresholds extracted from endoscopy and pH-impedance monitoring. The Lyon score was the sum of weighted scores derived from a logistic regression model. The outcome was response to anti-reflux therapy, defined as 50% reduction in global symptoms on validated questionnaires. An existing database of endoscopy-negative patients with typical reflux symptoms undergoing esophageal testing from two centers (Europe and US) constituted the developmental cohort, while two separate cohorts (Europe and Asia) served as validation cohorts. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis determined performance of the Lyon score in predicting treatment response.Results:In 281 developmental cohort patients (median age 53 years, 57.7% female), the Lyon score demonstrated an AUC of 0.819 in predicting 50% symptom improvement (p<0.001) on ROC, with an optimal threshold of 6.25 (sensitivity 81.2%, specificity 73.4%). Of the individual components, only acid exposure time (AUC 0.799, p<0.001), mean nocturnal baseline impedance (AUC 0.785, p<0.001) and reflux episodes (AUC 0.764, p<0.001) approached the Lyon score performance. The Lyon score segregated treatment response in both the European (AUC 0.908, p<0.001) and Asian validation cohorts (AUC 0.637, p<0.001), and outperformed the DeMeester score in sensitivity for predicting outcome in the developmental and Asian validation cohorts.Conclusion:The novel Lyon score segregates reflux phenotypes, and identifies likelihood of symptom response from antireflux therapy.
AB - Background:We explored if a score derived from parameters from esophageal testing could increase confidence in diagnosing conclusive gastroesophageal reflux disease and in predicting outcome.Methods:A prediction score was developed using metrics based on Lyon Consensus 2.0 thresholds extracted from endoscopy and pH-impedance monitoring. The Lyon score was the sum of weighted scores derived from a logistic regression model. The outcome was response to anti-reflux therapy, defined as 50% reduction in global symptoms on validated questionnaires. An existing database of endoscopy-negative patients with typical reflux symptoms undergoing esophageal testing from two centers (Europe and US) constituted the developmental cohort, while two separate cohorts (Europe and Asia) served as validation cohorts. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis determined performance of the Lyon score in predicting treatment response.Results:In 281 developmental cohort patients (median age 53 years, 57.7% female), the Lyon score demonstrated an AUC of 0.819 in predicting 50% symptom improvement (p<0.001) on ROC, with an optimal threshold of 6.25 (sensitivity 81.2%, specificity 73.4%). Of the individual components, only acid exposure time (AUC 0.799, p<0.001), mean nocturnal baseline impedance (AUC 0.785, p<0.001) and reflux episodes (AUC 0.764, p<0.001) approached the Lyon score performance. The Lyon score segregated treatment response in both the European (AUC 0.908, p<0.001) and Asian validation cohorts (AUC 0.637, p<0.001), and outperformed the DeMeester score in sensitivity for predicting outcome in the developmental and Asian validation cohorts.Conclusion:The novel Lyon score segregates reflux phenotypes, and identifies likelihood of symptom response from antireflux therapy.
KW - acid exposure time
KW - pH-impedance monitoring
KW - upper endoscopy
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U2 - 10.14309/ajg.0000000000003083
DO - 10.14309/ajg.0000000000003083
M3 - Article
C2 - 39297514
AN - SCOPUS:85205214960
SN - 0002-9270
JO - American Journal of Gastroenterology
JF - American Journal of Gastroenterology
M1 - 10.14309/ajg.0000000000003083
ER -