Review
Copyright ©2013 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Jan 21, 2013; 19(3): 331-338
Published online Jan 21, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i3.331
Table 1 Clinico-pathological classification for heterotopic gastric mucosa of the proximal esophagus
CategoryDescriptionSymptoms/findings
IAsymptomaticNone
IISymptomaticLaryngopharyngeal reflux
IIISymptomatic with benign complicationsStrictures/webs/fistula/bleeding
IVIntra-epithelial dysplasiaNone/non-specific
VMalignant transformationAsymptomatic/dysphagia
Table 2 Prevalence of symptoms reported to be associated with heterotopic gastric mucosa of the proximal esophagus in adult
Ref.Symptoms reportedPrevalence of LPR symptomsP value
HGMPE (+ve)HGMPE (-ve)
Chong et al[8]Overall LPR symptoms73.1%25.9%< 0.001
Chronic cough29.2%10.6%< 0.01
Sore throat/hoarseness54.2%11.7%< 0.01
Globus23.1%7.1%< 0.01
Regurgitation42.3%13.1%< 0.01
Heartburn50.0%22.5%< 0.01
Akbayir et al[15]Upper esophageal and laryngopharyngeal symptoms45%21.5%= 0.07
Baudet et al[21]Dysphagia21%4.0%< 0.001
Poyrazoglu et al[22]Dysphagia39.4%0%< 0.05
Alagozlu et al[23]Globus78.6%0%< 0.05
Dyspepsia88.2%97.8%NS
1Neumann et al[24]Dysphagia/odynophagia20.8%16.4%< 0.001
Upper respiratory symptoms2.5%0.9%< 0.001
Globus1.6%0.3%< 0.001
Weickert et al[25]Recurrent hoarseness9.1%5.6%= 0.5
Dysphagia (any grade upper and lower)15.2%9.4%NS
Heartburn (any grade upper and lower)15.2%9.4%NS
Table 3 Endoscopic studies reporting the associations between heterotopic gastric mucosa of the proximal esophagus and other endoscopic findings with special attention to Barrett’s esophagus n (%)
Ref.Prevalence of HGMPEFindings
Positive association
Avidan et al[4]53 (1.1)Significantly more reflux esophagitis (77 vs 50, P = 0.023), Barrett’s esophagus (34 vs 9, P < 0.001), hiatus hernia (49 vs 30, P < 0.05) and gastric ulcer (P < 0.05) On multivariate analysis, hiatus hernia, gastric ulcer and Barrett’s esophagus remained significant
Alagozlu et al[23]68 (1)Significantly more (P < 0.05) endoscopic Barrett’s esophagus in patients with HGM (13.2 vs 2.4) but not with reflux esophagitis (10.3 vs 9.5) Hiatus hernia and duodenal ulcer were reported in 13.2% and 10.3% respectively but no comparisons were made
1Neumann et al[24]870 (0.18)Significantly more Barrett’s mucosa on biopsy (9.7 vs 6.5, P < 0.001), adenocarcinoma arising from Barrett’s mucosa (3.6 vs 0.7, P < 0.01) and reflux esophagitis (41.8 vs 49.7, P < 0.001)
Yuksel et al[27]171 (1.8)Significantly more reflux esophagitis (25.1 vs 5.6, P < 0.001) and histologically proven Barrett’s esophagus (3.5 vs 0.5, P < 0.000) No difference in hiatus hernia
No association
Borhan-Monesh et al[3]64 (10)No significant difference (all P = NS) between reflux esophagitis (34.3 vs 38.1) and Barrett’s esophagus
Chong et al[8]26 (5.6)No significant difference (all P = NS) between esophageal, gastric and duodenal findings including Barrett’s esophagus (3.8 vs 3.7), hiatus hernia (15.4 vs 12.2) and ulcers
Akbayir et al[15]11 (1.67)No significant difference (all P = NS): Barrett’s esophagus (0 vs 0.9), hiatus hernia (0 vs 10), reflux esophagitis (27 vs 16) and duodenal ulcer (9 vs 7)
2Poyrazoglu et al[22]33 (3.6)No significant difference (all P = NS): Barrett’s esophagus (0 vs 0.8), hiatus hernia (3 vs 9.1), reflux esophagitis (36.4 vs 34.8), gastric ulcer (3 vs 3) and duodenal ulcer (6.1 vs 6.8)
Weickert et al[25]33 (11)Overall prevalence: hiatus hernia (n = 92, 30.7%), reflux esophagitis (n = 41, 13.7%), Barrett’s esophagus (n = 3, 1%), gastric ulcer (n = 24, 8%) and duodenal ulcer (n = 22, 7%), all P = NS
Jacobs et al[28]33 (4.9)Significant difference for reflux esophagitis (27.3 vs 11.4) but not for hiatus hernia (15.2 vs 12.5), Barrett’s esophagus (6.1 vs 1.1) and any gastric or duodenal ulcer (15.2 vs 6.1)
Table 4 Complications of heterotopic gastric mucosa of the proximal esophagus reported in the literature
Clinico-pathological classificationConditionsStatusNumbers based on PubMed literature search
Type IIIStrictureReported6
WebReported4
BleedingReported1
FistulaReported4
PerforationReported2
Polyp1Reported4
Type IV2Dysplasia
Low gradeReportedNone
High gradeReported3[32-34]
Type V2Adenocarcinoma
Early (pT1 tumor)Reported13[35-48]
AdvancedReported19[33,49-54]