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Esophageal high-resolution impedance manometry alterations in asymptomatic patients with systemic sclerosis: prevalence, associations with disease features, and prognostic value.

This study aims to investigate pre-clinical esophageal involvement in systemic sclerosis (SSc) by high-resolution impedance manometry (HRiM), its associations with disease features including lung involvement, and its predictivity of esophageal symptoms overtime. Charts of 45 asymptomatic (no heartburn/regurgitation/dysphagia) SSc patients (96% females; mean age 46 years) with at least one follow-up (FU) visit and complete clinical, serological, functional, and radiological assessment, including high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) of the chest and lung function tests, that had undergone esophageal HRiM were retrospectively evaluated. Esophagogastric junction-contractile integral (EGJ-CI) and esophageal body motility, as evaluated by mean distal contractile integral (DCI), were assessed. SSc patients had a normal esophageal motility in 7/45 cases, a defective EGJ-CI in 28, an ineffective esophageal motility (IEM) in 17, and aperistalsis in 12. Defective EGJ-CI was associated with IEM/aperistalsis in 20 cases, while 9 patients had isolated IEM. Defective EGJ-CI and/or IEM/aperistalsis were associated with a diffusing lung capacity for CO < 80% of predicted value (all p < 0.05), while defective EGJ-CI was also associated with interstitial lung disease on HRCT (p = 0.03). Prevalence of any HRiM abnormality was higher in anti-centromere antibody negative patients (all p < 0.05). IEM/aperistalsis independently increased the risk of esophageal symptoms by 2.3-fold (95% CI 1.1-5.7) and was associated with their higher cumulative incidence with respect to patients with other HRiM patterns at FU (χ2  = 4.63; p = 0.03). SSc patients asymptomatic for esophageal involvement can have HRiM abnormalities in up to 84% of cases. A baseline-impaired motility is a risk factor for symptomatic esophageal disease.

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