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The Official Newspaper of the AGA Institute
gambling
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Daech
drug paraphernalia
explosion
gun
human trafficking
ISIL
ISIS
Islamic caliphate
Islamic state
mixed martial arts
MMA
molestation
national rifle association
NRA
nsfw
pedophile
pedophilia
poker
porn
pornography
psychedelic drug
recreational drug
sex slave rings
slot machine
terrorism
terrorist
Texas hold 'em
UFC
substance abuse
abuseed
abuseer
abusees
abuseing
abusely
abuses
aeolus
aeolused
aeoluser
aeoluses
aeolusing
aeolusly
aeoluss
ahole
aholeed
aholeer
aholees
aholeing
aholely
aholes
alcohol
alcoholed
alcoholer
alcoholes
alcoholing
alcoholly
alcohols
allman
allmaned
allmaner
allmanes
allmaning
allmanly
allmans
alted
altes
alting
altly
alts
analed
analer
anales
analing
anally
analprobe
analprobeed
analprobeer
analprobees
analprobeing
analprobely
analprobes
anals
anilingus
anilingused
anilinguser
anilinguses
anilingusing
anilingusly
anilinguss
anus
anused
anuser
anuses
anusing
anusly
anuss
areola
areolaed
areolaer
areolaes
areolaing
areolaly
areolas
areole
areoleed
areoleer
areolees
areoleing
areolely
areoles
arian
arianed
arianer
arianes
arianing
arianly
arians
aryan
aryaned
aryaner
aryanes
aryaning
aryanly
aryans
asiaed
asiaer
asiaes
asiaing
asialy
asias
ass
ass hole
ass lick
ass licked
ass licker
ass lickes
ass licking
ass lickly
ass licks
assbang
assbanged
assbangeded
assbangeder
assbangedes
assbangeding
assbangedly
assbangeds
assbanger
assbanges
assbanging
assbangly
assbangs
assbangsed
assbangser
assbangses
assbangsing
assbangsly
assbangss
assed
asser
asses
assesed
asseser
asseses
assesing
assesly
assess
assfuck
assfucked
assfucker
assfuckered
assfuckerer
assfuckeres
assfuckering
assfuckerly
assfuckers
assfuckes
assfucking
assfuckly
assfucks
asshat
asshated
asshater
asshates
asshating
asshatly
asshats
assholeed
assholeer
assholees
assholeing
assholely
assholes
assholesed
assholeser
assholeses
assholesing
assholesly
assholess
assing
assly
assmaster
assmastered
assmasterer
assmasteres
assmastering
assmasterly
assmasters
assmunch
assmunched
assmuncher
assmunches
assmunching
assmunchly
assmunchs
asss
asswipe
asswipeed
asswipeer
asswipees
asswipeing
asswipely
asswipes
asswipesed
asswipeser
asswipeses
asswipesing
asswipesly
asswipess
azz
azzed
azzer
azzes
azzing
azzly
azzs
babeed
babeer
babees
babeing
babely
babes
babesed
babeser
babeses
babesing
babesly
babess
ballsac
ballsaced
ballsacer
ballsaces
ballsacing
ballsack
ballsacked
ballsacker
ballsackes
ballsacking
ballsackly
ballsacks
ballsacly
ballsacs
ballsed
ballser
ballses
ballsing
ballsly
ballss
barf
barfed
barfer
barfes
barfing
barfly
barfs
bastard
bastarded
bastarder
bastardes
bastarding
bastardly
bastards
bastardsed
bastardser
bastardses
bastardsing
bastardsly
bastardss
bawdy
bawdyed
bawdyer
bawdyes
bawdying
bawdyly
bawdys
beaner
beanered
beanerer
beaneres
beanering
beanerly
beaners
beardedclam
beardedclamed
beardedclamer
beardedclames
beardedclaming
beardedclamly
beardedclams
beastiality
beastialityed
beastialityer
beastialityes
beastialitying
beastialityly
beastialitys
beatch
beatched
beatcher
beatches
beatching
beatchly
beatchs
beater
beatered
beaterer
beateres
beatering
beaterly
beaters
beered
beerer
beeres
beering
beerly
beeyotch
beeyotched
beeyotcher
beeyotches
beeyotching
beeyotchly
beeyotchs
beotch
beotched
beotcher
beotches
beotching
beotchly
beotchs
biatch
biatched
biatcher
biatches
biatching
biatchly
biatchs
big tits
big titsed
big titser
big titses
big titsing
big titsly
big titss
bigtits
bigtitsed
bigtitser
bigtitses
bigtitsing
bigtitsly
bigtitss
bimbo
bimboed
bimboer
bimboes
bimboing
bimboly
bimbos
bisexualed
bisexualer
bisexuales
bisexualing
bisexually
bisexuals
bitch
bitched
bitcheded
bitcheder
bitchedes
bitcheding
bitchedly
bitcheds
bitcher
bitches
bitchesed
bitcheser
bitcheses
bitchesing
bitchesly
bitchess
bitching
bitchly
bitchs
bitchy
bitchyed
bitchyer
bitchyes
bitchying
bitchyly
bitchys
bleached
bleacher
bleaches
bleaching
bleachly
bleachs
blow job
blow jobed
blow jober
blow jobes
blow jobing
blow jobly
blow jobs
blowed
blower
blowes
blowing
blowjob
blowjobed
blowjober
blowjobes
blowjobing
blowjobly
blowjobs
blowjobsed
blowjobser
blowjobses
blowjobsing
blowjobsly
blowjobss
blowly
blows
boink
boinked
boinker
boinkes
boinking
boinkly
boinks
bollock
bollocked
bollocker
bollockes
bollocking
bollockly
bollocks
bollocksed
bollockser
bollockses
bollocksing
bollocksly
bollockss
bollok
bolloked
bolloker
bollokes
bolloking
bollokly
bolloks
boner
bonered
bonerer
boneres
bonering
bonerly
boners
bonersed
bonerser
bonerses
bonersing
bonersly
bonerss
bong
bonged
bonger
bonges
bonging
bongly
bongs
boob
boobed
boober
boobes
boobies
boobiesed
boobieser
boobieses
boobiesing
boobiesly
boobiess
boobing
boobly
boobs
boobsed
boobser
boobses
boobsing
boobsly
boobss
booby
boobyed
boobyer
boobyes
boobying
boobyly
boobys
booger
boogered
boogerer
boogeres
boogering
boogerly
boogers
bookie
bookieed
bookieer
bookiees
bookieing
bookiely
bookies
bootee
booteeed
booteeer
booteees
booteeing
booteely
bootees
bootie
bootieed
bootieer
bootiees
bootieing
bootiely
booties
booty
bootyed
bootyer
bootyes
bootying
bootyly
bootys
boozeed
boozeer
boozees
boozeing
boozely
boozer
boozered
boozerer
boozeres
boozering
boozerly
boozers
boozes
boozy
boozyed
boozyer
boozyes
boozying
boozyly
boozys
bosomed
bosomer
bosomes
bosoming
bosomly
bosoms
bosomy
bosomyed
bosomyer
bosomyes
bosomying
bosomyly
bosomys
bugger
buggered
buggerer
buggeres
buggering
buggerly
buggers
bukkake
bukkakeed
bukkakeer
bukkakees
bukkakeing
bukkakely
bukkakes
bull shit
bull shited
bull shiter
bull shites
bull shiting
bull shitly
bull shits
bullshit
bullshited
bullshiter
bullshites
bullshiting
bullshitly
bullshits
bullshitsed
bullshitser
bullshitses
bullshitsing
bullshitsly
bullshitss
bullshitted
bullshitteded
bullshitteder
bullshittedes
bullshitteding
bullshittedly
bullshitteds
bullturds
bullturdsed
bullturdser
bullturdses
bullturdsing
bullturdsly
bullturdss
bung
bunged
bunger
bunges
bunging
bungly
bungs
busty
bustyed
bustyer
bustyes
bustying
bustyly
bustys
butt
butt fuck
butt fucked
butt fucker
butt fuckes
butt fucking
butt fuckly
butt fucks
butted
buttes
buttfuck
buttfucked
buttfucker
buttfuckered
buttfuckerer
buttfuckeres
buttfuckering
buttfuckerly
buttfuckers
buttfuckes
buttfucking
buttfuckly
buttfucks
butting
buttly
buttplug
buttpluged
buttpluger
buttpluges
buttpluging
buttplugly
buttplugs
butts
caca
cacaed
cacaer
cacaes
cacaing
cacaly
cacas
cahone
cahoneed
cahoneer
cahonees
cahoneing
cahonely
cahones
cameltoe
cameltoeed
cameltoeer
cameltoees
cameltoeing
cameltoely
cameltoes
carpetmuncher
carpetmunchered
carpetmuncherer
carpetmuncheres
carpetmunchering
carpetmuncherly
carpetmunchers
cawk
cawked
cawker
cawkes
cawking
cawkly
cawks
chinc
chinced
chincer
chinces
chincing
chincly
chincs
chincsed
chincser
chincses
chincsing
chincsly
chincss
chink
chinked
chinker
chinkes
chinking
chinkly
chinks
chode
chodeed
chodeer
chodees
chodeing
chodely
chodes
chodesed
chodeser
chodeses
chodesing
chodesly
chodess
clit
clited
cliter
clites
cliting
clitly
clitoris
clitorised
clitoriser
clitorises
clitorising
clitorisly
clitoriss
clitorus
clitorused
clitoruser
clitoruses
clitorusing
clitorusly
clitoruss
clits
clitsed
clitser
clitses
clitsing
clitsly
clitss
clitty
clittyed
clittyer
clittyes
clittying
clittyly
clittys
cocain
cocaine
cocained
cocaineed
cocaineer
cocainees
cocaineing
cocainely
cocainer
cocaines
cocaining
cocainly
cocains
cock
cock sucker
cock suckered
cock suckerer
cock suckeres
cock suckering
cock suckerly
cock suckers
cockblock
cockblocked
cockblocker
cockblockes
cockblocking
cockblockly
cockblocks
cocked
cocker
cockes
cockholster
cockholstered
cockholsterer
cockholsteres
cockholstering
cockholsterly
cockholsters
cocking
cockknocker
cockknockered
cockknockerer
cockknockeres
cockknockering
cockknockerly
cockknockers
cockly
cocks
cocksed
cockser
cockses
cocksing
cocksly
cocksmoker
cocksmokered
cocksmokerer
cocksmokeres
cocksmokering
cocksmokerly
cocksmokers
cockss
cocksucker
cocksuckered
cocksuckerer
cocksuckeres
cocksuckering
cocksuckerly
cocksuckers
coital
coitaled
coitaler
coitales
coitaling
coitally
coitals
commie
commieed
commieer
commiees
commieing
commiely
commies
condomed
condomer
condomes
condoming
condomly
condoms
coon
cooned
cooner
coones
cooning
coonly
coons
coonsed
coonser
coonses
coonsing
coonsly
coonss
corksucker
corksuckered
corksuckerer
corksuckeres
corksuckering
corksuckerly
corksuckers
cracked
crackwhore
crackwhoreed
crackwhoreer
crackwhorees
crackwhoreing
crackwhorely
crackwhores
crap
craped
craper
crapes
craping
craply
crappy
crappyed
crappyer
crappyes
crappying
crappyly
crappys
cum
cumed
cumer
cumes
cuming
cumly
cummin
cummined
cumminer
cummines
cumming
cumminged
cumminger
cumminges
cumminging
cummingly
cummings
cummining
cumminly
cummins
cums
cumshot
cumshoted
cumshoter
cumshotes
cumshoting
cumshotly
cumshots
cumshotsed
cumshotser
cumshotses
cumshotsing
cumshotsly
cumshotss
cumslut
cumsluted
cumsluter
cumslutes
cumsluting
cumslutly
cumsluts
cumstain
cumstained
cumstainer
cumstaines
cumstaining
cumstainly
cumstains
cunilingus
cunilingused
cunilinguser
cunilinguses
cunilingusing
cunilingusly
cunilinguss
cunnilingus
cunnilingused
cunnilinguser
cunnilinguses
cunnilingusing
cunnilingusly
cunnilinguss
cunny
cunnyed
cunnyer
cunnyes
cunnying
cunnyly
cunnys
cunt
cunted
cunter
cuntes
cuntface
cuntfaceed
cuntfaceer
cuntfacees
cuntfaceing
cuntfacely
cuntfaces
cunthunter
cunthuntered
cunthunterer
cunthunteres
cunthuntering
cunthunterly
cunthunters
cunting
cuntlick
cuntlicked
cuntlicker
cuntlickered
cuntlickerer
cuntlickeres
cuntlickering
cuntlickerly
cuntlickers
cuntlickes
cuntlicking
cuntlickly
cuntlicks
cuntly
cunts
cuntsed
cuntser
cuntses
cuntsing
cuntsly
cuntss
dago
dagoed
dagoer
dagoes
dagoing
dagoly
dagos
dagosed
dagoser
dagoses
dagosing
dagosly
dagoss
dammit
dammited
dammiter
dammites
dammiting
dammitly
dammits
damn
damned
damneded
damneder
damnedes
damneding
damnedly
damneds
damner
damnes
damning
damnit
damnited
damniter
damnites
damniting
damnitly
damnits
damnly
damns
dick
dickbag
dickbaged
dickbager
dickbages
dickbaging
dickbagly
dickbags
dickdipper
dickdippered
dickdipperer
dickdipperes
dickdippering
dickdipperly
dickdippers
dicked
dicker
dickes
dickface
dickfaceed
dickfaceer
dickfacees
dickfaceing
dickfacely
dickfaces
dickflipper
dickflippered
dickflipperer
dickflipperes
dickflippering
dickflipperly
dickflippers
dickhead
dickheaded
dickheader
dickheades
dickheading
dickheadly
dickheads
dickheadsed
dickheadser
dickheadses
dickheadsing
dickheadsly
dickheadss
dicking
dickish
dickished
dickisher
dickishes
dickishing
dickishly
dickishs
dickly
dickripper
dickrippered
dickripperer
dickripperes
dickrippering
dickripperly
dickrippers
dicks
dicksipper
dicksippered
dicksipperer
dicksipperes
dicksippering
dicksipperly
dicksippers
dickweed
dickweeded
dickweeder
dickweedes
dickweeding
dickweedly
dickweeds
dickwhipper
dickwhippered
dickwhipperer
dickwhipperes
dickwhippering
dickwhipperly
dickwhippers
dickzipper
dickzippered
dickzipperer
dickzipperes
dickzippering
dickzipperly
dickzippers
diddle
diddleed
diddleer
diddlees
diddleing
diddlely
diddles
dike
dikeed
dikeer
dikees
dikeing
dikely
dikes
dildo
dildoed
dildoer
dildoes
dildoing
dildoly
dildos
dildosed
dildoser
dildoses
dildosing
dildosly
dildoss
diligaf
diligafed
diligafer
diligafes
diligafing
diligafly
diligafs
dillweed
dillweeded
dillweeder
dillweedes
dillweeding
dillweedly
dillweeds
dimwit
dimwited
dimwiter
dimwites
dimwiting
dimwitly
dimwits
dingle
dingleed
dingleer
dinglees
dingleing
dinglely
dingles
dipship
dipshiped
dipshiper
dipshipes
dipshiping
dipshiply
dipships
dizzyed
dizzyer
dizzyes
dizzying
dizzyly
dizzys
doggiestyleed
doggiestyleer
doggiestylees
doggiestyleing
doggiestylely
doggiestyles
doggystyleed
doggystyleer
doggystylees
doggystyleing
doggystylely
doggystyles
dong
donged
donger
donges
donging
dongly
dongs
doofus
doofused
doofuser
doofuses
doofusing
doofusly
doofuss
doosh
dooshed
doosher
dooshes
dooshing
dooshly
dooshs
dopeyed
dopeyer
dopeyes
dopeying
dopeyly
dopeys
douchebag
douchebaged
douchebager
douchebages
douchebaging
douchebagly
douchebags
douchebagsed
douchebagser
douchebagses
douchebagsing
douchebagsly
douchebagss
doucheed
doucheer
douchees
doucheing
douchely
douches
douchey
doucheyed
doucheyer
doucheyes
doucheying
doucheyly
doucheys
drunk
drunked
drunker
drunkes
drunking
drunkly
drunks
dumass
dumassed
dumasser
dumasses
dumassing
dumassly
dumasss
dumbass
dumbassed
dumbasser
dumbasses
dumbassesed
dumbasseser
dumbasseses
dumbassesing
dumbassesly
dumbassess
dumbassing
dumbassly
dumbasss
dummy
dummyed
dummyer
dummyes
dummying
dummyly
dummys
dyke
dykeed
dykeer
dykees
dykeing
dykely
dykes
dykesed
dykeser
dykeses
dykesing
dykesly
dykess
erotic
eroticed
eroticer
erotices
eroticing
eroticly
erotics
extacy
extacyed
extacyer
extacyes
extacying
extacyly
extacys
extasy
extasyed
extasyer
extasyes
extasying
extasyly
extasys
fack
facked
facker
fackes
facking
fackly
facks
fag
faged
fager
fages
fagg
fagged
faggeded
faggeder
faggedes
faggeding
faggedly
faggeds
fagger
fagges
fagging
faggit
faggited
faggiter
faggites
faggiting
faggitly
faggits
faggly
faggot
faggoted
faggoter
faggotes
faggoting
faggotly
faggots
faggs
faging
fagly
fagot
fagoted
fagoter
fagotes
fagoting
fagotly
fagots
fags
fagsed
fagser
fagses
fagsing
fagsly
fagss
faig
faiged
faiger
faiges
faiging
faigly
faigs
faigt
faigted
faigter
faigtes
faigting
faigtly
faigts
fannybandit
fannybandited
fannybanditer
fannybandites
fannybanditing
fannybanditly
fannybandits
farted
farter
fartes
farting
fartknocker
fartknockered
fartknockerer
fartknockeres
fartknockering
fartknockerly
fartknockers
fartly
farts
felch
felched
felcher
felchered
felcherer
felcheres
felchering
felcherly
felchers
felches
felching
felchinged
felchinger
felchinges
felchinging
felchingly
felchings
felchly
felchs
fellate
fellateed
fellateer
fellatees
fellateing
fellately
fellates
fellatio
fellatioed
fellatioer
fellatioes
fellatioing
fellatioly
fellatios
feltch
feltched
feltcher
feltchered
feltcherer
feltcheres
feltchering
feltcherly
feltchers
feltches
feltching
feltchly
feltchs
feom
feomed
feomer
feomes
feoming
feomly
feoms
fisted
fisteded
fisteder
fistedes
fisteding
fistedly
fisteds
fisting
fistinged
fistinger
fistinges
fistinging
fistingly
fistings
fisty
fistyed
fistyer
fistyes
fistying
fistyly
fistys
floozy
floozyed
floozyer
floozyes
floozying
floozyly
floozys
foad
foaded
foader
foades
foading
foadly
foads
fondleed
fondleer
fondlees
fondleing
fondlely
fondles
foobar
foobared
foobarer
foobares
foobaring
foobarly
foobars
freex
freexed
freexer
freexes
freexing
freexly
freexs
frigg
frigga
friggaed
friggaer
friggaes
friggaing
friggaly
friggas
frigged
frigger
frigges
frigging
friggly
friggs
fubar
fubared
fubarer
fubares
fubaring
fubarly
fubars
fuck
fuckass
fuckassed
fuckasser
fuckasses
fuckassing
fuckassly
fuckasss
fucked
fuckeded
fuckeder
fuckedes
fuckeding
fuckedly
fuckeds
fucker
fuckered
fuckerer
fuckeres
fuckering
fuckerly
fuckers
fuckes
fuckface
fuckfaceed
fuckfaceer
fuckfacees
fuckfaceing
fuckfacely
fuckfaces
fuckin
fuckined
fuckiner
fuckines
fucking
fuckinged
fuckinger
fuckinges
fuckinging
fuckingly
fuckings
fuckining
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Walnuts Cut Gut Permeability in Obesity
, a small study showed.
“Less than 10% of adults are meeting their fiber needs each day, and walnuts are a source of dietary fiber, which helps nourish the gut microbiota,” study coauthor Hannah Holscher, PhD, RD, associate professor of nutrition at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told GI & Hepatology News.
Holscher and her colleagues previously conducted a study on the effects of walnut consumption on the human intestinal microbiota “and found interesting results,” she said. Among 18 healthy men and women with a mean age of 53 years, “walnuts enriched intestinal microorganisms, including Roseburia that provide important gut-health promoting attributes, like short-chain fatty acid production. We also saw lower proinflammatory secondary bile acid concentrations in individuals that ate walnuts.”
The current study, presented at NUTRITION 2025 in Orlando, Florida, found similar benefits among 30 adults with obesity but without diabetes or gastrointestinal disease.
Walnut Halves, Walnut Oil, Corn Oil — Compared
The researchers aimed to determine the impact of walnut consumption on the gut microbiome, serum and fecal bile acid profiles, systemic inflammation, and oral glucose tolerance to a mixed-meal challenge.
Participants were enrolled in a randomized, controlled, crossover, complete feeding trial with three 3-week conditions, each identical except for walnut halves (WH), walnut oil (WO), or corn oil (CO) in the diet. A 3-week washout separated each condition.
“This was a fully controlled dietary feeding intervention,” Holscher said. “We provided their breakfast, lunch, snacks and dinners — all of their foods and beverages during the three dietary intervention periods that lasted for 3 weeks each. Their base diet consisted of typical American foods that you would find in a grocery store in central Illinois.”
Fecal samples were collected on days 18-20. On day 20, participants underwent a 6-hour mixed-meal tolerance test (75 g glucose + treatment) with a fasting blood draw followed by blood sampling every 30 minutes.
The fecal microbiome and microbiota were assessed using metagenomic and amplicon sequencing, respectively. Fecal microbial metabolites were quantified using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.
Blood glucose, insulin, and inflammatory biomarkers (interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, C-reactive protein, and lipopolysaccharide-binding protein) were quantified. Fecal and circulating bile acids were measured via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry.
Gut permeability was assessed by quantifying 24-hour urinary excretion of orally ingested sucralose and erythritol on day 21.
Linear mixed-effects models and repeated measures ANOVA were used for the statistical analysis.
The team found that Roseburia spp were greatest following WH (3.9%) vs WO (1.6) and CO (1.9); Lachnospiraceae UCG-001 and UCG-004 were also greatest with WH vs WO and CO.
WH fecal isobutyrate concentrations (5.41 µmol/g) were lower than WO (7.17 µmol/g) and CO (7.77). Similarly, fecal isovalerate concentrations were lowest with WH (7.84 µmol/g) vs WO (10.3µmol/g) and CO (11.6 µmol/g).
In contrast, indoles were highest in WH (36.8 µmol/g) vs WO (6.78 µmol/g) and CO (8.67µmol/g).
No differences in glucose concentrations were seen among groups. The 2-hour area under the curve (AUC) for insulin was lower with WH (469 µIU/mL/min) and WO (494) vs CO (604 µIU/mL/min).
The 4-hour AUC for glycolithocholic acid was lower with WH vs WO and CO. Furthermore, sucralose recovery was lowest following WH (10.5) vs WO (14.3) and CO (14.6).
“Our current efforts are focused on understanding connections between plasma bile acids and glycemic control (ie, blood glucose and insulin concentrations),” Holscher said. “We are also interested in studying individualized or personalized responses, since people had different magnitudes of responses.”
In addition, she said, “as the gut microbiome is one of the factors that can underpin the physiological response to the diet, we are interested in determining if there are microbial signatures that are predictive of glycemic control.”
Because the research is still in the early stages, at this point, Holscher simply encourages people to eat a variety of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes and nuts to meet their daily fiber recommendations and support their gut microbiome.
This study was funded by a USDA NIFA grant. No competing interests were reported.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .
, a small study showed.
“Less than 10% of adults are meeting their fiber needs each day, and walnuts are a source of dietary fiber, which helps nourish the gut microbiota,” study coauthor Hannah Holscher, PhD, RD, associate professor of nutrition at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told GI & Hepatology News.
Holscher and her colleagues previously conducted a study on the effects of walnut consumption on the human intestinal microbiota “and found interesting results,” she said. Among 18 healthy men and women with a mean age of 53 years, “walnuts enriched intestinal microorganisms, including Roseburia that provide important gut-health promoting attributes, like short-chain fatty acid production. We also saw lower proinflammatory secondary bile acid concentrations in individuals that ate walnuts.”
The current study, presented at NUTRITION 2025 in Orlando, Florida, found similar benefits among 30 adults with obesity but without diabetes or gastrointestinal disease.
Walnut Halves, Walnut Oil, Corn Oil — Compared
The researchers aimed to determine the impact of walnut consumption on the gut microbiome, serum and fecal bile acid profiles, systemic inflammation, and oral glucose tolerance to a mixed-meal challenge.
Participants were enrolled in a randomized, controlled, crossover, complete feeding trial with three 3-week conditions, each identical except for walnut halves (WH), walnut oil (WO), or corn oil (CO) in the diet. A 3-week washout separated each condition.
“This was a fully controlled dietary feeding intervention,” Holscher said. “We provided their breakfast, lunch, snacks and dinners — all of their foods and beverages during the three dietary intervention periods that lasted for 3 weeks each. Their base diet consisted of typical American foods that you would find in a grocery store in central Illinois.”
Fecal samples were collected on days 18-20. On day 20, participants underwent a 6-hour mixed-meal tolerance test (75 g glucose + treatment) with a fasting blood draw followed by blood sampling every 30 minutes.
The fecal microbiome and microbiota were assessed using metagenomic and amplicon sequencing, respectively. Fecal microbial metabolites were quantified using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.
Blood glucose, insulin, and inflammatory biomarkers (interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, C-reactive protein, and lipopolysaccharide-binding protein) were quantified. Fecal and circulating bile acids were measured via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry.
Gut permeability was assessed by quantifying 24-hour urinary excretion of orally ingested sucralose and erythritol on day 21.
Linear mixed-effects models and repeated measures ANOVA were used for the statistical analysis.
The team found that Roseburia spp were greatest following WH (3.9%) vs WO (1.6) and CO (1.9); Lachnospiraceae UCG-001 and UCG-004 were also greatest with WH vs WO and CO.
WH fecal isobutyrate concentrations (5.41 µmol/g) were lower than WO (7.17 µmol/g) and CO (7.77). Similarly, fecal isovalerate concentrations were lowest with WH (7.84 µmol/g) vs WO (10.3µmol/g) and CO (11.6 µmol/g).
In contrast, indoles were highest in WH (36.8 µmol/g) vs WO (6.78 µmol/g) and CO (8.67µmol/g).
No differences in glucose concentrations were seen among groups. The 2-hour area under the curve (AUC) for insulin was lower with WH (469 µIU/mL/min) and WO (494) vs CO (604 µIU/mL/min).
The 4-hour AUC for glycolithocholic acid was lower with WH vs WO and CO. Furthermore, sucralose recovery was lowest following WH (10.5) vs WO (14.3) and CO (14.6).
“Our current efforts are focused on understanding connections between plasma bile acids and glycemic control (ie, blood glucose and insulin concentrations),” Holscher said. “We are also interested in studying individualized or personalized responses, since people had different magnitudes of responses.”
In addition, she said, “as the gut microbiome is one of the factors that can underpin the physiological response to the diet, we are interested in determining if there are microbial signatures that are predictive of glycemic control.”
Because the research is still in the early stages, at this point, Holscher simply encourages people to eat a variety of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes and nuts to meet their daily fiber recommendations and support their gut microbiome.
This study was funded by a USDA NIFA grant. No competing interests were reported.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .
, a small study showed.
“Less than 10% of adults are meeting their fiber needs each day, and walnuts are a source of dietary fiber, which helps nourish the gut microbiota,” study coauthor Hannah Holscher, PhD, RD, associate professor of nutrition at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told GI & Hepatology News.
Holscher and her colleagues previously conducted a study on the effects of walnut consumption on the human intestinal microbiota “and found interesting results,” she said. Among 18 healthy men and women with a mean age of 53 years, “walnuts enriched intestinal microorganisms, including Roseburia that provide important gut-health promoting attributes, like short-chain fatty acid production. We also saw lower proinflammatory secondary bile acid concentrations in individuals that ate walnuts.”
The current study, presented at NUTRITION 2025 in Orlando, Florida, found similar benefits among 30 adults with obesity but without diabetes or gastrointestinal disease.
Walnut Halves, Walnut Oil, Corn Oil — Compared
The researchers aimed to determine the impact of walnut consumption on the gut microbiome, serum and fecal bile acid profiles, systemic inflammation, and oral glucose tolerance to a mixed-meal challenge.
Participants were enrolled in a randomized, controlled, crossover, complete feeding trial with three 3-week conditions, each identical except for walnut halves (WH), walnut oil (WO), or corn oil (CO) in the diet. A 3-week washout separated each condition.
“This was a fully controlled dietary feeding intervention,” Holscher said. “We provided their breakfast, lunch, snacks and dinners — all of their foods and beverages during the three dietary intervention periods that lasted for 3 weeks each. Their base diet consisted of typical American foods that you would find in a grocery store in central Illinois.”
Fecal samples were collected on days 18-20. On day 20, participants underwent a 6-hour mixed-meal tolerance test (75 g glucose + treatment) with a fasting blood draw followed by blood sampling every 30 minutes.
The fecal microbiome and microbiota were assessed using metagenomic and amplicon sequencing, respectively. Fecal microbial metabolites were quantified using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.
Blood glucose, insulin, and inflammatory biomarkers (interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, C-reactive protein, and lipopolysaccharide-binding protein) were quantified. Fecal and circulating bile acids were measured via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry.
Gut permeability was assessed by quantifying 24-hour urinary excretion of orally ingested sucralose and erythritol on day 21.
Linear mixed-effects models and repeated measures ANOVA were used for the statistical analysis.
The team found that Roseburia spp were greatest following WH (3.9%) vs WO (1.6) and CO (1.9); Lachnospiraceae UCG-001 and UCG-004 were also greatest with WH vs WO and CO.
WH fecal isobutyrate concentrations (5.41 µmol/g) were lower than WO (7.17 µmol/g) and CO (7.77). Similarly, fecal isovalerate concentrations were lowest with WH (7.84 µmol/g) vs WO (10.3µmol/g) and CO (11.6 µmol/g).
In contrast, indoles were highest in WH (36.8 µmol/g) vs WO (6.78 µmol/g) and CO (8.67µmol/g).
No differences in glucose concentrations were seen among groups. The 2-hour area under the curve (AUC) for insulin was lower with WH (469 µIU/mL/min) and WO (494) vs CO (604 µIU/mL/min).
The 4-hour AUC for glycolithocholic acid was lower with WH vs WO and CO. Furthermore, sucralose recovery was lowest following WH (10.5) vs WO (14.3) and CO (14.6).
“Our current efforts are focused on understanding connections between plasma bile acids and glycemic control (ie, blood glucose and insulin concentrations),” Holscher said. “We are also interested in studying individualized or personalized responses, since people had different magnitudes of responses.”
In addition, she said, “as the gut microbiome is one of the factors that can underpin the physiological response to the diet, we are interested in determining if there are microbial signatures that are predictive of glycemic control.”
Because the research is still in the early stages, at this point, Holscher simply encourages people to eat a variety of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes and nuts to meet their daily fiber recommendations and support their gut microbiome.
This study was funded by a USDA NIFA grant. No competing interests were reported.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .
Intestinal Ultrasound Shows Promise in Prognosis of Early Crohn’s Disease
, a prospective, population-based cohort of newly diagnosed patients in Denmark reported.
Adding to the growing body of evidence on the utility of this noninvasive imaging tool in monitoring disease activity in the newly diagnosed, the multicenter study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology characterized ultrasonographic features at diagnosis and evaluated IUS’s prognostic value. Existing literature has focused on patients with long-standing disease.
Investigators led by first author Gorm R. Madsen, MD, PhD, of the Copenhagen Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Children, Adolescents and Adults at Copenhagen University Hospital, observed continued improvement in most IUS parameters throughout the first year. “Our findings thereby emphasize the role of IUS in improving patient management, and its use in patient risk stratification already at diagnosis,” the investigators wrote.
Some 38% of patients reached ultrasonic transmural remission within 3 months of diagnosis, an achievement associated with higher rates of sustained steroid-free clinical remission and reduced need for treatment escalation.
“Ultrasonic transmural remission is achievable early in Crohn’s disease and is associated with favorable outcomes, underscoring the value of intestinal ultrasound in early disease management,” the researchers wrote.
Study Details
While IUS is increasingly recognized for monitoring CD, little was known about its prognostic value early in the disease course. “We aimed to determine whether sonographic inflammation at diagnosis — and particularly the achievement pftransmural remission after 3 months — could predict future outcomes,” Madsen told GI & Hepatology News. “This is important, as early identification of patients at risk of surgery or treatment escalation may help guide therapy decisions more effectively.”
From May 2021 to April 2023, 201 patients (mean age, 35 years; 54.2% men) with new adult-onset CD were followed by IUS and monitored with symptomatic, biochemical, and endoscopic evaluations.
After 3 months, transmural remission was achieved more often by patients with colonic disease, and no associations were found between sonographic inflammation at diagnosis and diagnostic delay.
“We were positively surprised. Nearly 40% of newly diagnosed Crohn’s patients achieved transmural remission within 3 months — a higher proportion than seen in earlier studies, which mostly focused on long-standing or trial-selected populations,” Madsen said. “It was also striking how strongly early IUS findings predicted the need for surgery, outperforming endoscopy and biomarkers.”
In other findings, transmural remission at 3 months was significantly associated with steroid-free clinical remission at both 3 months and all subsequent follow-ups within the first year. It was also linked to a lower risk for treatment escalation during the follow-up through to 12 months: 26% vs 53% (P =.003). At 12 months, 41% had achieved transmural remission.
Higher baseline body mass index significantly reduced the likelihood of 12-month transmural remission. For overweight, the odds ratio (OR) was 0.34 (95% CI, 0.12-0.94), while for obesity, the OR was 0.16 (95% CI, 0.04-0.73).
The International Bowel Ultrasound Segmental Activity Score in the terminal ileum at diagnosis emerged as the best predictor of ileocecal resection during the first year, with an optimal threshold of 63 (area under the curve, 0.92; sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 73%).
The use of IUS has expanded considerably in the past 3 years, and in 2024, the American Gastroenterological Association updated its clinical practice guidance on the role of this modality in inflammatory bowel disease.
IUS is noninvasive, radiation-free, inexpensive, and doable at the bedside with immediate results, Madsen said. “For patients, this means less anxiety and discomfort. For healthcare systems, it enables faster clinical decisions, reduced need for endoscopy or MRI, and closer disease monitoring, particularly valuable in treat-to-target strategies.”
In terms of limitations, however, IUS is operator-dependent and consistent training is crucial, he added. “Certain anatomical regions, particularly the proximal small bowel, can be more challenging to evaluate. Additionally, while IUS is highly effective for assessing inflammatory activity, it becomes more difficult to accurately assess disease involvement when inflammation extends beyond approximately 20 cm of the small bowel.”
Key Insights
Commenting on the Danish study from a US perspective, Anna L. Silverman, MD, a gastroenterology fellow at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, agreed the findings in adult patients with newly diagnosed, rather than long-standing, CD contribute to the growing body of evidence supporting IUS’s applicability for both treatment monitoring and prognosis.
“By focusing on early-stage CD, the study provides clearer insights into initial disease activity and response to therapy, reinforcing the value of this noninvasive, point-of-care modality,” she told GI & Hepatology News. “These findings enhance our understanding of IUS as a tool to help guide early management decisions in CD.”
Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, AGAF, director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and an associate professor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, concurred that this is an important study. “It includes newly diagnosed patients — so a very ‘clean’ cohort in terms of not being influenced by confounders,” he told GI & Hepatology News.
“We don’t fully know yet the best treatment target in CD, and this study highlights the importance of early transmural healing in determining outcomes at 1 year,” he noted. In addition, the study highlighted a convenient tool that can increasingly be applied at point of care in the United States. “Colonoscopy at 3 months is not practical and has low patient acceptability, so using IUS in this circumstance would have value and impact.”
Ananthakrishnan pointed to several unanswered questions, however. “Are there patients who may not have healing early but may take some extra time to achieve transmural remission, and if so, what are their outcomes? What is the best timepoint for transmural healing assessment? What is the incremental value of measuring it at 3 vs 6 months?”
In addition, he wondered, how much is the added value of IUS over clinical symptoms and/or markers such as calprotectin and C-reactive protein? “In the subset of patients with clinical and transmural remission, there was no difference in endoscopic outcomes at 1 year, so this is an unanswered question,” Ananthakrishnan said.
This study was funded by an unrestricted grant from the Novo Nordisk Foundation.
Madsen reported receiving a speaker’s fee from Tillotts. Multiple coauthors disclosed having various financial relationships with numerous private-sector companies, including Novo Nordisk. Silverman and Ananthakrishnan reported having no competing interests relevant to their comments.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, a prospective, population-based cohort of newly diagnosed patients in Denmark reported.
Adding to the growing body of evidence on the utility of this noninvasive imaging tool in monitoring disease activity in the newly diagnosed, the multicenter study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology characterized ultrasonographic features at diagnosis and evaluated IUS’s prognostic value. Existing literature has focused on patients with long-standing disease.
Investigators led by first author Gorm R. Madsen, MD, PhD, of the Copenhagen Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Children, Adolescents and Adults at Copenhagen University Hospital, observed continued improvement in most IUS parameters throughout the first year. “Our findings thereby emphasize the role of IUS in improving patient management, and its use in patient risk stratification already at diagnosis,” the investigators wrote.
Some 38% of patients reached ultrasonic transmural remission within 3 months of diagnosis, an achievement associated with higher rates of sustained steroid-free clinical remission and reduced need for treatment escalation.
“Ultrasonic transmural remission is achievable early in Crohn’s disease and is associated with favorable outcomes, underscoring the value of intestinal ultrasound in early disease management,” the researchers wrote.
Study Details
While IUS is increasingly recognized for monitoring CD, little was known about its prognostic value early in the disease course. “We aimed to determine whether sonographic inflammation at diagnosis — and particularly the achievement pftransmural remission after 3 months — could predict future outcomes,” Madsen told GI & Hepatology News. “This is important, as early identification of patients at risk of surgery or treatment escalation may help guide therapy decisions more effectively.”
From May 2021 to April 2023, 201 patients (mean age, 35 years; 54.2% men) with new adult-onset CD were followed by IUS and monitored with symptomatic, biochemical, and endoscopic evaluations.
After 3 months, transmural remission was achieved more often by patients with colonic disease, and no associations were found between sonographic inflammation at diagnosis and diagnostic delay.
“We were positively surprised. Nearly 40% of newly diagnosed Crohn’s patients achieved transmural remission within 3 months — a higher proportion than seen in earlier studies, which mostly focused on long-standing or trial-selected populations,” Madsen said. “It was also striking how strongly early IUS findings predicted the need for surgery, outperforming endoscopy and biomarkers.”
In other findings, transmural remission at 3 months was significantly associated with steroid-free clinical remission at both 3 months and all subsequent follow-ups within the first year. It was also linked to a lower risk for treatment escalation during the follow-up through to 12 months: 26% vs 53% (P =.003). At 12 months, 41% had achieved transmural remission.
Higher baseline body mass index significantly reduced the likelihood of 12-month transmural remission. For overweight, the odds ratio (OR) was 0.34 (95% CI, 0.12-0.94), while for obesity, the OR was 0.16 (95% CI, 0.04-0.73).
The International Bowel Ultrasound Segmental Activity Score in the terminal ileum at diagnosis emerged as the best predictor of ileocecal resection during the first year, with an optimal threshold of 63 (area under the curve, 0.92; sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 73%).
The use of IUS has expanded considerably in the past 3 years, and in 2024, the American Gastroenterological Association updated its clinical practice guidance on the role of this modality in inflammatory bowel disease.
IUS is noninvasive, radiation-free, inexpensive, and doable at the bedside with immediate results, Madsen said. “For patients, this means less anxiety and discomfort. For healthcare systems, it enables faster clinical decisions, reduced need for endoscopy or MRI, and closer disease monitoring, particularly valuable in treat-to-target strategies.”
In terms of limitations, however, IUS is operator-dependent and consistent training is crucial, he added. “Certain anatomical regions, particularly the proximal small bowel, can be more challenging to evaluate. Additionally, while IUS is highly effective for assessing inflammatory activity, it becomes more difficult to accurately assess disease involvement when inflammation extends beyond approximately 20 cm of the small bowel.”
Key Insights
Commenting on the Danish study from a US perspective, Anna L. Silverman, MD, a gastroenterology fellow at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, agreed the findings in adult patients with newly diagnosed, rather than long-standing, CD contribute to the growing body of evidence supporting IUS’s applicability for both treatment monitoring and prognosis.
“By focusing on early-stage CD, the study provides clearer insights into initial disease activity and response to therapy, reinforcing the value of this noninvasive, point-of-care modality,” she told GI & Hepatology News. “These findings enhance our understanding of IUS as a tool to help guide early management decisions in CD.”
Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, AGAF, director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and an associate professor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, concurred that this is an important study. “It includes newly diagnosed patients — so a very ‘clean’ cohort in terms of not being influenced by confounders,” he told GI & Hepatology News.
“We don’t fully know yet the best treatment target in CD, and this study highlights the importance of early transmural healing in determining outcomes at 1 year,” he noted. In addition, the study highlighted a convenient tool that can increasingly be applied at point of care in the United States. “Colonoscopy at 3 months is not practical and has low patient acceptability, so using IUS in this circumstance would have value and impact.”
Ananthakrishnan pointed to several unanswered questions, however. “Are there patients who may not have healing early but may take some extra time to achieve transmural remission, and if so, what are their outcomes? What is the best timepoint for transmural healing assessment? What is the incremental value of measuring it at 3 vs 6 months?”
In addition, he wondered, how much is the added value of IUS over clinical symptoms and/or markers such as calprotectin and C-reactive protein? “In the subset of patients with clinical and transmural remission, there was no difference in endoscopic outcomes at 1 year, so this is an unanswered question,” Ananthakrishnan said.
This study was funded by an unrestricted grant from the Novo Nordisk Foundation.
Madsen reported receiving a speaker’s fee from Tillotts. Multiple coauthors disclosed having various financial relationships with numerous private-sector companies, including Novo Nordisk. Silverman and Ananthakrishnan reported having no competing interests relevant to their comments.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, a prospective, population-based cohort of newly diagnosed patients in Denmark reported.
Adding to the growing body of evidence on the utility of this noninvasive imaging tool in monitoring disease activity in the newly diagnosed, the multicenter study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology characterized ultrasonographic features at diagnosis and evaluated IUS’s prognostic value. Existing literature has focused on patients with long-standing disease.
Investigators led by first author Gorm R. Madsen, MD, PhD, of the Copenhagen Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Children, Adolescents and Adults at Copenhagen University Hospital, observed continued improvement in most IUS parameters throughout the first year. “Our findings thereby emphasize the role of IUS in improving patient management, and its use in patient risk stratification already at diagnosis,” the investigators wrote.
Some 38% of patients reached ultrasonic transmural remission within 3 months of diagnosis, an achievement associated with higher rates of sustained steroid-free clinical remission and reduced need for treatment escalation.
“Ultrasonic transmural remission is achievable early in Crohn’s disease and is associated with favorable outcomes, underscoring the value of intestinal ultrasound in early disease management,” the researchers wrote.
Study Details
While IUS is increasingly recognized for monitoring CD, little was known about its prognostic value early in the disease course. “We aimed to determine whether sonographic inflammation at diagnosis — and particularly the achievement pftransmural remission after 3 months — could predict future outcomes,” Madsen told GI & Hepatology News. “This is important, as early identification of patients at risk of surgery or treatment escalation may help guide therapy decisions more effectively.”
From May 2021 to April 2023, 201 patients (mean age, 35 years; 54.2% men) with new adult-onset CD were followed by IUS and monitored with symptomatic, biochemical, and endoscopic evaluations.
After 3 months, transmural remission was achieved more often by patients with colonic disease, and no associations were found between sonographic inflammation at diagnosis and diagnostic delay.
“We were positively surprised. Nearly 40% of newly diagnosed Crohn’s patients achieved transmural remission within 3 months — a higher proportion than seen in earlier studies, which mostly focused on long-standing or trial-selected populations,” Madsen said. “It was also striking how strongly early IUS findings predicted the need for surgery, outperforming endoscopy and biomarkers.”
In other findings, transmural remission at 3 months was significantly associated with steroid-free clinical remission at both 3 months and all subsequent follow-ups within the first year. It was also linked to a lower risk for treatment escalation during the follow-up through to 12 months: 26% vs 53% (P =.003). At 12 months, 41% had achieved transmural remission.
Higher baseline body mass index significantly reduced the likelihood of 12-month transmural remission. For overweight, the odds ratio (OR) was 0.34 (95% CI, 0.12-0.94), while for obesity, the OR was 0.16 (95% CI, 0.04-0.73).
The International Bowel Ultrasound Segmental Activity Score in the terminal ileum at diagnosis emerged as the best predictor of ileocecal resection during the first year, with an optimal threshold of 63 (area under the curve, 0.92; sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 73%).
The use of IUS has expanded considerably in the past 3 years, and in 2024, the American Gastroenterological Association updated its clinical practice guidance on the role of this modality in inflammatory bowel disease.
IUS is noninvasive, radiation-free, inexpensive, and doable at the bedside with immediate results, Madsen said. “For patients, this means less anxiety and discomfort. For healthcare systems, it enables faster clinical decisions, reduced need for endoscopy or MRI, and closer disease monitoring, particularly valuable in treat-to-target strategies.”
In terms of limitations, however, IUS is operator-dependent and consistent training is crucial, he added. “Certain anatomical regions, particularly the proximal small bowel, can be more challenging to evaluate. Additionally, while IUS is highly effective for assessing inflammatory activity, it becomes more difficult to accurately assess disease involvement when inflammation extends beyond approximately 20 cm of the small bowel.”
Key Insights
Commenting on the Danish study from a US perspective, Anna L. Silverman, MD, a gastroenterology fellow at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, agreed the findings in adult patients with newly diagnosed, rather than long-standing, CD contribute to the growing body of evidence supporting IUS’s applicability for both treatment monitoring and prognosis.
“By focusing on early-stage CD, the study provides clearer insights into initial disease activity and response to therapy, reinforcing the value of this noninvasive, point-of-care modality,” she told GI & Hepatology News. “These findings enhance our understanding of IUS as a tool to help guide early management decisions in CD.”
Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, AGAF, director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and an associate professor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, concurred that this is an important study. “It includes newly diagnosed patients — so a very ‘clean’ cohort in terms of not being influenced by confounders,” he told GI & Hepatology News.
“We don’t fully know yet the best treatment target in CD, and this study highlights the importance of early transmural healing in determining outcomes at 1 year,” he noted. In addition, the study highlighted a convenient tool that can increasingly be applied at point of care in the United States. “Colonoscopy at 3 months is not practical and has low patient acceptability, so using IUS in this circumstance would have value and impact.”
Ananthakrishnan pointed to several unanswered questions, however. “Are there patients who may not have healing early but may take some extra time to achieve transmural remission, and if so, what are their outcomes? What is the best timepoint for transmural healing assessment? What is the incremental value of measuring it at 3 vs 6 months?”
In addition, he wondered, how much is the added value of IUS over clinical symptoms and/or markers such as calprotectin and C-reactive protein? “In the subset of patients with clinical and transmural remission, there was no difference in endoscopic outcomes at 1 year, so this is an unanswered question,” Ananthakrishnan said.
This study was funded by an unrestricted grant from the Novo Nordisk Foundation.
Madsen reported receiving a speaker’s fee from Tillotts. Multiple coauthors disclosed having various financial relationships with numerous private-sector companies, including Novo Nordisk. Silverman and Ananthakrishnan reported having no competing interests relevant to their comments.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY
EoE Prevalence in US Reaches 1 in 700, Costs $1B Annually
, according to recent research.
Although EoE has been considered a rare disease, the chronic condition is becoming more common, and healthcare providers should expect to encounter EoE in clinical settings, the study authors wrote.
“Our last assessment of the prevalence and burden of EoE was more than 10 years ago, and we had a strong suspicion we would continue to see increased numbers of patients with EoE and an increasing cost burden related to the condition in the United States,” said senior author Evan S. Dellon, MD, MPH, AGAF, professor of gastroenterology and hepatology and director of the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
“EoE is becoming more common,” Dellon said. “Healthcare providers should expect to see EoE in their practices, including in the primary care setting, emergency departments, allergy practices, GI [gastrointestinal] practices, ENT clinics, and endoscopy suites.”
The study was published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Estimating EoE Prevalence
Dellon and colleagues analyzed the Merative MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters and Medicare Fee-for-Service databases to calculate the annual prevalence of EoE, as well as age- and sex-stratified estimates standardized to the US population. They also calculated healthcare utilization, including medications and endoscopic procedures, to estimate annual EoE-associated costs. Since the EoE billing code was introduced in 2008, the analysis included 2009-2022 MarketScan and 2009-2017 Medicare data.
In the MarketScan database, the research team identified 20,435 EoE cases in 2022, with a mean age of 38 years, 16% younger than 18 years, 62% men, and 41% with a comorbid allergic disease code. The most common symptoms and diagnoses were dysphagia (39%), abdominal pain or dyspepsia (24%), and esophageal stricture (19%). Over time, patients also had previous codes for comorbid allergic diseases (64%), dysphagia (62%), or esophageal stricture (32%).
In the Medicare database, the research team identified 1913 EoE cases in 2017, with a mean age of 73 years, 47% men, 90% non-Hispanic White, and 36% with a comorbid allergic disease. The most common symptoms and diagnoses were dysphagia (49%), abdominal pain or dyspepsia (35%), and esophageal stricture (30%). Over time, patients also had codes for comorbid allergic diseases (64%), dysphagia (65%), or esophageal stricture (42%).
The database numbers translated to EoE prevalences of about 163 cases per 100,000 people in MarketScan in 2022 and 64 cases per 100,000 people in Medicare in 2017. Since 2009, there has been a fivefold increase in prevalence in both databases.
In MarketScan, the prevalence was higher among men than among women, at 204 vs 122 cases per 100,000 people. For both sexes, peak prevalence occurred between ages 40 and 44.
In Medicare, prevalence was also higher among men than among women, at 79 vs 55 cases per 100,000 people. Peak prevalence occurred between ages 65 and 69.
Standardized to the US population, EoE prevalence was 142.5 cases per 100,000 people, extrapolating to 472,380 cases. The overall prevalence was approximately 1 in 700, with rates of 1 in 617 for those younger than 65 years and 1 in 1562 for those aged ≥ 65 years.
“The rapidly increasing prevalence year over year for the entire timeframe of the study was surprising, as were our estimates of the total number of EoE patients in the US, which suggests that EoE is no longer a rare disease and is now seen in about 1 in 700 people,” Dellon said. “This almost triples our prior estimates of 1 in 2000 from 10 years ago, with all trends suggesting that the prevalence will continue to increase.”
Calculating EoE Costs
In terms of procedures, endoscopy with dilation or biopsy was used in about 60%-70% of patients with EoE in both MarketScan and Medicare during the years analyzed. In addition, upper endoscopy with biopsy was coded in 80%-90% of patients, guidewire-based dilation in 11%-17% of patients, and balloon-based dilation in 13%-20% of patients.
In terms of prescription medications, proton pump inhibitors (41%) and topical steroids (26%) were the most common in MarketScan in 2022, as well as in Medicare in 2017, at 32% and 9%, respectively.
When looking at costs by age and sex, the male cohort with the highest costs was aged 10-14 years, estimated at $106.7 million. Among the female cohort, the highest costs were associated with ages 15-19, estimated at $46.5 million.
Overall, total EoE-associated healthcare costs were estimated to be $1.04 billion in 2017, and when adjusted for inflation, the costs were estimated at $1.32 billion in 2024. This is likely an underestimate, the authors wrote, given that EoE prevalence has likely increased for ages 65 or older since 2017 and for all ages since 2022.
“Researching the prevalence and costs is essential to improving patient care by highlighting the growing burden of this recently recognized and growing chronic disease, guiding policy and insurer decisions, and advocating for better access to effective treatments and support for patients,” said Joy Chang, MD, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.Chang, who wasn’t involved with this study, specializes in eosinophilic GI diseases and researches patient-physician preferences and decision-making in EoE care.
“Clinicians should remain vigilant for symptoms, utilize guideline-based diagnostic approaches, and consider both medical and dietary treatment strategies to optimize patient outcomes and reduce long-term costs,” she said. “Increased awareness and timely intervention can help mitigate the growing impact of this chronic condition.”
The study was supported by a National Institutes of Health grant and used resources from the University of North Carolina Center for Gastrointestinal Biology and Disease. Dellon reported receiving research funding from and having consultant roles with numerous pharmaceutical companies and organizations. Chang reported having no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, according to recent research.
Although EoE has been considered a rare disease, the chronic condition is becoming more common, and healthcare providers should expect to encounter EoE in clinical settings, the study authors wrote.
“Our last assessment of the prevalence and burden of EoE was more than 10 years ago, and we had a strong suspicion we would continue to see increased numbers of patients with EoE and an increasing cost burden related to the condition in the United States,” said senior author Evan S. Dellon, MD, MPH, AGAF, professor of gastroenterology and hepatology and director of the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
“EoE is becoming more common,” Dellon said. “Healthcare providers should expect to see EoE in their practices, including in the primary care setting, emergency departments, allergy practices, GI [gastrointestinal] practices, ENT clinics, and endoscopy suites.”
The study was published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Estimating EoE Prevalence
Dellon and colleagues analyzed the Merative MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters and Medicare Fee-for-Service databases to calculate the annual prevalence of EoE, as well as age- and sex-stratified estimates standardized to the US population. They also calculated healthcare utilization, including medications and endoscopic procedures, to estimate annual EoE-associated costs. Since the EoE billing code was introduced in 2008, the analysis included 2009-2022 MarketScan and 2009-2017 Medicare data.
In the MarketScan database, the research team identified 20,435 EoE cases in 2022, with a mean age of 38 years, 16% younger than 18 years, 62% men, and 41% with a comorbid allergic disease code. The most common symptoms and diagnoses were dysphagia (39%), abdominal pain or dyspepsia (24%), and esophageal stricture (19%). Over time, patients also had previous codes for comorbid allergic diseases (64%), dysphagia (62%), or esophageal stricture (32%).
In the Medicare database, the research team identified 1913 EoE cases in 2017, with a mean age of 73 years, 47% men, 90% non-Hispanic White, and 36% with a comorbid allergic disease. The most common symptoms and diagnoses were dysphagia (49%), abdominal pain or dyspepsia (35%), and esophageal stricture (30%). Over time, patients also had codes for comorbid allergic diseases (64%), dysphagia (65%), or esophageal stricture (42%).
The database numbers translated to EoE prevalences of about 163 cases per 100,000 people in MarketScan in 2022 and 64 cases per 100,000 people in Medicare in 2017. Since 2009, there has been a fivefold increase in prevalence in both databases.
In MarketScan, the prevalence was higher among men than among women, at 204 vs 122 cases per 100,000 people. For both sexes, peak prevalence occurred between ages 40 and 44.
In Medicare, prevalence was also higher among men than among women, at 79 vs 55 cases per 100,000 people. Peak prevalence occurred between ages 65 and 69.
Standardized to the US population, EoE prevalence was 142.5 cases per 100,000 people, extrapolating to 472,380 cases. The overall prevalence was approximately 1 in 700, with rates of 1 in 617 for those younger than 65 years and 1 in 1562 for those aged ≥ 65 years.
“The rapidly increasing prevalence year over year for the entire timeframe of the study was surprising, as were our estimates of the total number of EoE patients in the US, which suggests that EoE is no longer a rare disease and is now seen in about 1 in 700 people,” Dellon said. “This almost triples our prior estimates of 1 in 2000 from 10 years ago, with all trends suggesting that the prevalence will continue to increase.”
Calculating EoE Costs
In terms of procedures, endoscopy with dilation or biopsy was used in about 60%-70% of patients with EoE in both MarketScan and Medicare during the years analyzed. In addition, upper endoscopy with biopsy was coded in 80%-90% of patients, guidewire-based dilation in 11%-17% of patients, and balloon-based dilation in 13%-20% of patients.
In terms of prescription medications, proton pump inhibitors (41%) and topical steroids (26%) were the most common in MarketScan in 2022, as well as in Medicare in 2017, at 32% and 9%, respectively.
When looking at costs by age and sex, the male cohort with the highest costs was aged 10-14 years, estimated at $106.7 million. Among the female cohort, the highest costs were associated with ages 15-19, estimated at $46.5 million.
Overall, total EoE-associated healthcare costs were estimated to be $1.04 billion in 2017, and when adjusted for inflation, the costs were estimated at $1.32 billion in 2024. This is likely an underestimate, the authors wrote, given that EoE prevalence has likely increased for ages 65 or older since 2017 and for all ages since 2022.
“Researching the prevalence and costs is essential to improving patient care by highlighting the growing burden of this recently recognized and growing chronic disease, guiding policy and insurer decisions, and advocating for better access to effective treatments and support for patients,” said Joy Chang, MD, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.Chang, who wasn’t involved with this study, specializes in eosinophilic GI diseases and researches patient-physician preferences and decision-making in EoE care.
“Clinicians should remain vigilant for symptoms, utilize guideline-based diagnostic approaches, and consider both medical and dietary treatment strategies to optimize patient outcomes and reduce long-term costs,” she said. “Increased awareness and timely intervention can help mitigate the growing impact of this chronic condition.”
The study was supported by a National Institutes of Health grant and used resources from the University of North Carolina Center for Gastrointestinal Biology and Disease. Dellon reported receiving research funding from and having consultant roles with numerous pharmaceutical companies and organizations. Chang reported having no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, according to recent research.
Although EoE has been considered a rare disease, the chronic condition is becoming more common, and healthcare providers should expect to encounter EoE in clinical settings, the study authors wrote.
“Our last assessment of the prevalence and burden of EoE was more than 10 years ago, and we had a strong suspicion we would continue to see increased numbers of patients with EoE and an increasing cost burden related to the condition in the United States,” said senior author Evan S. Dellon, MD, MPH, AGAF, professor of gastroenterology and hepatology and director of the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
“EoE is becoming more common,” Dellon said. “Healthcare providers should expect to see EoE in their practices, including in the primary care setting, emergency departments, allergy practices, GI [gastrointestinal] practices, ENT clinics, and endoscopy suites.”
The study was published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Estimating EoE Prevalence
Dellon and colleagues analyzed the Merative MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters and Medicare Fee-for-Service databases to calculate the annual prevalence of EoE, as well as age- and sex-stratified estimates standardized to the US population. They also calculated healthcare utilization, including medications and endoscopic procedures, to estimate annual EoE-associated costs. Since the EoE billing code was introduced in 2008, the analysis included 2009-2022 MarketScan and 2009-2017 Medicare data.
In the MarketScan database, the research team identified 20,435 EoE cases in 2022, with a mean age of 38 years, 16% younger than 18 years, 62% men, and 41% with a comorbid allergic disease code. The most common symptoms and diagnoses were dysphagia (39%), abdominal pain or dyspepsia (24%), and esophageal stricture (19%). Over time, patients also had previous codes for comorbid allergic diseases (64%), dysphagia (62%), or esophageal stricture (32%).
In the Medicare database, the research team identified 1913 EoE cases in 2017, with a mean age of 73 years, 47% men, 90% non-Hispanic White, and 36% with a comorbid allergic disease. The most common symptoms and diagnoses were dysphagia (49%), abdominal pain or dyspepsia (35%), and esophageal stricture (30%). Over time, patients also had codes for comorbid allergic diseases (64%), dysphagia (65%), or esophageal stricture (42%).
The database numbers translated to EoE prevalences of about 163 cases per 100,000 people in MarketScan in 2022 and 64 cases per 100,000 people in Medicare in 2017. Since 2009, there has been a fivefold increase in prevalence in both databases.
In MarketScan, the prevalence was higher among men than among women, at 204 vs 122 cases per 100,000 people. For both sexes, peak prevalence occurred between ages 40 and 44.
In Medicare, prevalence was also higher among men than among women, at 79 vs 55 cases per 100,000 people. Peak prevalence occurred between ages 65 and 69.
Standardized to the US population, EoE prevalence was 142.5 cases per 100,000 people, extrapolating to 472,380 cases. The overall prevalence was approximately 1 in 700, with rates of 1 in 617 for those younger than 65 years and 1 in 1562 for those aged ≥ 65 years.
“The rapidly increasing prevalence year over year for the entire timeframe of the study was surprising, as were our estimates of the total number of EoE patients in the US, which suggests that EoE is no longer a rare disease and is now seen in about 1 in 700 people,” Dellon said. “This almost triples our prior estimates of 1 in 2000 from 10 years ago, with all trends suggesting that the prevalence will continue to increase.”
Calculating EoE Costs
In terms of procedures, endoscopy with dilation or biopsy was used in about 60%-70% of patients with EoE in both MarketScan and Medicare during the years analyzed. In addition, upper endoscopy with biopsy was coded in 80%-90% of patients, guidewire-based dilation in 11%-17% of patients, and balloon-based dilation in 13%-20% of patients.
In terms of prescription medications, proton pump inhibitors (41%) and topical steroids (26%) were the most common in MarketScan in 2022, as well as in Medicare in 2017, at 32% and 9%, respectively.
When looking at costs by age and sex, the male cohort with the highest costs was aged 10-14 years, estimated at $106.7 million. Among the female cohort, the highest costs were associated with ages 15-19, estimated at $46.5 million.
Overall, total EoE-associated healthcare costs were estimated to be $1.04 billion in 2017, and when adjusted for inflation, the costs were estimated at $1.32 billion in 2024. This is likely an underestimate, the authors wrote, given that EoE prevalence has likely increased for ages 65 or older since 2017 and for all ages since 2022.
“Researching the prevalence and costs is essential to improving patient care by highlighting the growing burden of this recently recognized and growing chronic disease, guiding policy and insurer decisions, and advocating for better access to effective treatments and support for patients,” said Joy Chang, MD, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.Chang, who wasn’t involved with this study, specializes in eosinophilic GI diseases and researches patient-physician preferences and decision-making in EoE care.
“Clinicians should remain vigilant for symptoms, utilize guideline-based diagnostic approaches, and consider both medical and dietary treatment strategies to optimize patient outcomes and reduce long-term costs,” she said. “Increased awareness and timely intervention can help mitigate the growing impact of this chronic condition.”
The study was supported by a National Institutes of Health grant and used resources from the University of North Carolina Center for Gastrointestinal Biology and Disease. Dellon reported receiving research funding from and having consultant roles with numerous pharmaceutical companies and organizations. Chang reported having no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY
AI Algorithm Predicts Transfusion Need, Mortality Risk in Acute GI Bleeds
SAN DIEGO — , researchers reported at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
Acute GI bleeding is the most common cause of digestive disease–related hospitalization, with an estimated 500,000 hospital admissions annually. It’s known that predicting the need for red blood cell transfusion in the first 24 hours may improve resuscitation and decrease both morbidity and mortality.
However, an existing clinical score known as the Rockall Score does not perform well for predicting mortality, Xi (Nicole) Zhang, an MD-PhD student at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, told attendees at DDW. With an area under the curve of 0.65-0.75, better prediction is needed, said Zhang, whose coresearchers included Dennis Shung, MD, MHS, PhD, director of Applied Artificial Intelligence at Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
“We’d like to predict multiple outcomes in addition to mortality,” said Zhang, who is also a student at the Mila-Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute.
As a result, the researchers turned to the TFM approach, applying it to ICU patients with acute GI bleeding to predict both the need for transfusion and in-hospital mortality risk. The all-cause mortality rate is up to 11%, according to a 2020 study by James Y. W. Lau, MD, and colleagues. The rebleeding rate of nonvariceal upper GI bleeds is up to 10.4%. Zhang said the rebleeding rate for variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding is up to 65%.
The AI method the researchers used outperformed a standard deep learning model at predicting the need for transfusion and estimating mortality risk.
Defining the AI Framework
“Probabilistic flow matching is a class of generative artificial intelligence that learns how a simple distribution becomes a more complex distribution with ordinary differential equations,” Zhang told GI & Hepatology News. “For example, if you had a few lines and shapes you could learn how it could become a detailed portrait of a face. In our case, we start with a few blood pressure and heart rate measurements and learn the pattern of blood pressures and heart rates over time, particularly if they reflect clinical deterioration with hemodynamic instability.”
Another way to think about the underlying algorithm, Zhang said, is to think about a river with boats where the river flow determines where the boats end up. “We are trying to direct the boat to the correct dock by adjusting the flow of water in the canal. In this case we are mapping the distribution with the first few data points to the distribution with the entire patient trajectory.”
The information gained, she said, could be helpful in timing endoscopic evaluation or allocating red blood cell products for emergent transfusion.
Study Details
The researchers evaluated a cohort of 2602 patients admitted to the ICU, identified from the publicly available MIMIC-III database. They divided the patients into a training set of 2342 patients and an internal validation set of 260 patients. Input variables were severe liver disease comorbidity, administration of vasopressor medications, mean arterial blood pressure, and heart rate over the first 24 hours.
Excluded was hemoglobin, since the point was to test the trajectory of hemodynamic parameters independent of hemoglobin thresholds used to guide red blood cell transfusion.
The outcome measures were administration of packed red blood cell transfusion within 24 hours and all-cause hospital mortality.
The TFM was more accurate than a standard deep learning model in predicting red blood cell transfusion, with an accuracy of 93.6% vs 43.2%; P ≤ .001. It was also more accurate at predicting all-cause in-hospital mortality, with an accuracy of 89.5% vs 42.5%, P = .01.
The researchers concluded that the TFM approach was able to predict the hemodynamic trajectories of patients with acute GI bleeding defined as deviation and outperformed the baseline from the measured mean arterial pressure and heart rate.
Expert Perspective
“This is an exciting proof-of-concept study that shows generative AI methods may be applied to complex datasets in order to improve on our current predictive models and improve patient care,” said Jeremy Glissen Brown, MD, MSc, an assistant professor of medicine and a practicing gastroenterologist at Duke University who has published research on the use of AI in clinical practice. He reviewed the study for GI & Hepatology News but was not involved in the research.
“Future work will likely look into the implementation of a version of this model on real-time data.” he said. “We are at an exciting inflection point in predictive models within GI and clinical medicine. Predictive models based on deep learning and generative AI hold the promise of improving how we predict and treat disease states, but the excitement being generated with studies such as this needs to be balanced with the trade-offs inherent to the current paradigm of deep learning and generative models compared to more traditional regression-based models. These include many of the same ‘black box’ explainability questions that have risen in the age of convolutional neural networks as well as some method-specific questions due to the continuous and implicit nature of TFM.”
Elaborating on that, Glissen Brown said: “TFM, like many deep learning techniques, raises concerns about explainability that we’ve long seen with convolutional neural networks — the ‘black box’ problem, where it’s difficult to interpret exactly how and why the model arrives at a particular decision. But TFM also introduces unique challenges due to its continuous and implicit formulation. Since it often learns flows without explicitly defining intermediate representations or steps, it can be harder to trace the logic or pathways it uses to connect inputs to outputs. This makes standard interpretability tools less effective and calls for new techniques tailored to these continuous architectures.”
“This approach could have a real clinical impact,” said Robert Hirten, MD, associate professor of medicine and artificial intelligence, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, who also reviewed the study. “Accurately predicting transfusion needs and mortality risk in real time could support earlier, more targeted interventions for high-risk patients. While these findings still need to be validated in prospective studies, it could enhance ICU decision-making and resource allocation.”
“For the practicing gastroenterologist, we envision this system could help them figure out when to perform endoscopy in a patient admitted with acute gastrointestinal bleeding in the ICU at very high risk of exsanguination,” Zhang told GI & Hepatology News.
The approach, the researchers said, will be useful in identifying unique patient characteristics, make possible the identification of high-risk patients and lead to more personalized medicine.
Hirten, Zhang, and Shung had no disclosures. Glissen Brown reported consulting relationships with Medtronic, OdinVision, Doximity, and Olympus. The National Institutes of Health funded this study.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — , researchers reported at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
Acute GI bleeding is the most common cause of digestive disease–related hospitalization, with an estimated 500,000 hospital admissions annually. It’s known that predicting the need for red blood cell transfusion in the first 24 hours may improve resuscitation and decrease both morbidity and mortality.
However, an existing clinical score known as the Rockall Score does not perform well for predicting mortality, Xi (Nicole) Zhang, an MD-PhD student at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, told attendees at DDW. With an area under the curve of 0.65-0.75, better prediction is needed, said Zhang, whose coresearchers included Dennis Shung, MD, MHS, PhD, director of Applied Artificial Intelligence at Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
“We’d like to predict multiple outcomes in addition to mortality,” said Zhang, who is also a student at the Mila-Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute.
As a result, the researchers turned to the TFM approach, applying it to ICU patients with acute GI bleeding to predict both the need for transfusion and in-hospital mortality risk. The all-cause mortality rate is up to 11%, according to a 2020 study by James Y. W. Lau, MD, and colleagues. The rebleeding rate of nonvariceal upper GI bleeds is up to 10.4%. Zhang said the rebleeding rate for variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding is up to 65%.
The AI method the researchers used outperformed a standard deep learning model at predicting the need for transfusion and estimating mortality risk.
Defining the AI Framework
“Probabilistic flow matching is a class of generative artificial intelligence that learns how a simple distribution becomes a more complex distribution with ordinary differential equations,” Zhang told GI & Hepatology News. “For example, if you had a few lines and shapes you could learn how it could become a detailed portrait of a face. In our case, we start with a few blood pressure and heart rate measurements and learn the pattern of blood pressures and heart rates over time, particularly if they reflect clinical deterioration with hemodynamic instability.”
Another way to think about the underlying algorithm, Zhang said, is to think about a river with boats where the river flow determines where the boats end up. “We are trying to direct the boat to the correct dock by adjusting the flow of water in the canal. In this case we are mapping the distribution with the first few data points to the distribution with the entire patient trajectory.”
The information gained, she said, could be helpful in timing endoscopic evaluation or allocating red blood cell products for emergent transfusion.
Study Details
The researchers evaluated a cohort of 2602 patients admitted to the ICU, identified from the publicly available MIMIC-III database. They divided the patients into a training set of 2342 patients and an internal validation set of 260 patients. Input variables were severe liver disease comorbidity, administration of vasopressor medications, mean arterial blood pressure, and heart rate over the first 24 hours.
Excluded was hemoglobin, since the point was to test the trajectory of hemodynamic parameters independent of hemoglobin thresholds used to guide red blood cell transfusion.
The outcome measures were administration of packed red blood cell transfusion within 24 hours and all-cause hospital mortality.
The TFM was more accurate than a standard deep learning model in predicting red blood cell transfusion, with an accuracy of 93.6% vs 43.2%; P ≤ .001. It was also more accurate at predicting all-cause in-hospital mortality, with an accuracy of 89.5% vs 42.5%, P = .01.
The researchers concluded that the TFM approach was able to predict the hemodynamic trajectories of patients with acute GI bleeding defined as deviation and outperformed the baseline from the measured mean arterial pressure and heart rate.
Expert Perspective
“This is an exciting proof-of-concept study that shows generative AI methods may be applied to complex datasets in order to improve on our current predictive models and improve patient care,” said Jeremy Glissen Brown, MD, MSc, an assistant professor of medicine and a practicing gastroenterologist at Duke University who has published research on the use of AI in clinical practice. He reviewed the study for GI & Hepatology News but was not involved in the research.
“Future work will likely look into the implementation of a version of this model on real-time data.” he said. “We are at an exciting inflection point in predictive models within GI and clinical medicine. Predictive models based on deep learning and generative AI hold the promise of improving how we predict and treat disease states, but the excitement being generated with studies such as this needs to be balanced with the trade-offs inherent to the current paradigm of deep learning and generative models compared to more traditional regression-based models. These include many of the same ‘black box’ explainability questions that have risen in the age of convolutional neural networks as well as some method-specific questions due to the continuous and implicit nature of TFM.”
Elaborating on that, Glissen Brown said: “TFM, like many deep learning techniques, raises concerns about explainability that we’ve long seen with convolutional neural networks — the ‘black box’ problem, where it’s difficult to interpret exactly how and why the model arrives at a particular decision. But TFM also introduces unique challenges due to its continuous and implicit formulation. Since it often learns flows without explicitly defining intermediate representations or steps, it can be harder to trace the logic or pathways it uses to connect inputs to outputs. This makes standard interpretability tools less effective and calls for new techniques tailored to these continuous architectures.”
“This approach could have a real clinical impact,” said Robert Hirten, MD, associate professor of medicine and artificial intelligence, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, who also reviewed the study. “Accurately predicting transfusion needs and mortality risk in real time could support earlier, more targeted interventions for high-risk patients. While these findings still need to be validated in prospective studies, it could enhance ICU decision-making and resource allocation.”
“For the practicing gastroenterologist, we envision this system could help them figure out when to perform endoscopy in a patient admitted with acute gastrointestinal bleeding in the ICU at very high risk of exsanguination,” Zhang told GI & Hepatology News.
The approach, the researchers said, will be useful in identifying unique patient characteristics, make possible the identification of high-risk patients and lead to more personalized medicine.
Hirten, Zhang, and Shung had no disclosures. Glissen Brown reported consulting relationships with Medtronic, OdinVision, Doximity, and Olympus. The National Institutes of Health funded this study.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — , researchers reported at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
Acute GI bleeding is the most common cause of digestive disease–related hospitalization, with an estimated 500,000 hospital admissions annually. It’s known that predicting the need for red blood cell transfusion in the first 24 hours may improve resuscitation and decrease both morbidity and mortality.
However, an existing clinical score known as the Rockall Score does not perform well for predicting mortality, Xi (Nicole) Zhang, an MD-PhD student at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, told attendees at DDW. With an area under the curve of 0.65-0.75, better prediction is needed, said Zhang, whose coresearchers included Dennis Shung, MD, MHS, PhD, director of Applied Artificial Intelligence at Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
“We’d like to predict multiple outcomes in addition to mortality,” said Zhang, who is also a student at the Mila-Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute.
As a result, the researchers turned to the TFM approach, applying it to ICU patients with acute GI bleeding to predict both the need for transfusion and in-hospital mortality risk. The all-cause mortality rate is up to 11%, according to a 2020 study by James Y. W. Lau, MD, and colleagues. The rebleeding rate of nonvariceal upper GI bleeds is up to 10.4%. Zhang said the rebleeding rate for variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding is up to 65%.
The AI method the researchers used outperformed a standard deep learning model at predicting the need for transfusion and estimating mortality risk.
Defining the AI Framework
“Probabilistic flow matching is a class of generative artificial intelligence that learns how a simple distribution becomes a more complex distribution with ordinary differential equations,” Zhang told GI & Hepatology News. “For example, if you had a few lines and shapes you could learn how it could become a detailed portrait of a face. In our case, we start with a few blood pressure and heart rate measurements and learn the pattern of blood pressures and heart rates over time, particularly if they reflect clinical deterioration with hemodynamic instability.”
Another way to think about the underlying algorithm, Zhang said, is to think about a river with boats where the river flow determines where the boats end up. “We are trying to direct the boat to the correct dock by adjusting the flow of water in the canal. In this case we are mapping the distribution with the first few data points to the distribution with the entire patient trajectory.”
The information gained, she said, could be helpful in timing endoscopic evaluation or allocating red blood cell products for emergent transfusion.
Study Details
The researchers evaluated a cohort of 2602 patients admitted to the ICU, identified from the publicly available MIMIC-III database. They divided the patients into a training set of 2342 patients and an internal validation set of 260 patients. Input variables were severe liver disease comorbidity, administration of vasopressor medications, mean arterial blood pressure, and heart rate over the first 24 hours.
Excluded was hemoglobin, since the point was to test the trajectory of hemodynamic parameters independent of hemoglobin thresholds used to guide red blood cell transfusion.
The outcome measures were administration of packed red blood cell transfusion within 24 hours and all-cause hospital mortality.
The TFM was more accurate than a standard deep learning model in predicting red blood cell transfusion, with an accuracy of 93.6% vs 43.2%; P ≤ .001. It was also more accurate at predicting all-cause in-hospital mortality, with an accuracy of 89.5% vs 42.5%, P = .01.
The researchers concluded that the TFM approach was able to predict the hemodynamic trajectories of patients with acute GI bleeding defined as deviation and outperformed the baseline from the measured mean arterial pressure and heart rate.
Expert Perspective
“This is an exciting proof-of-concept study that shows generative AI methods may be applied to complex datasets in order to improve on our current predictive models and improve patient care,” said Jeremy Glissen Brown, MD, MSc, an assistant professor of medicine and a practicing gastroenterologist at Duke University who has published research on the use of AI in clinical practice. He reviewed the study for GI & Hepatology News but was not involved in the research.
“Future work will likely look into the implementation of a version of this model on real-time data.” he said. “We are at an exciting inflection point in predictive models within GI and clinical medicine. Predictive models based on deep learning and generative AI hold the promise of improving how we predict and treat disease states, but the excitement being generated with studies such as this needs to be balanced with the trade-offs inherent to the current paradigm of deep learning and generative models compared to more traditional regression-based models. These include many of the same ‘black box’ explainability questions that have risen in the age of convolutional neural networks as well as some method-specific questions due to the continuous and implicit nature of TFM.”
Elaborating on that, Glissen Brown said: “TFM, like many deep learning techniques, raises concerns about explainability that we’ve long seen with convolutional neural networks — the ‘black box’ problem, where it’s difficult to interpret exactly how and why the model arrives at a particular decision. But TFM also introduces unique challenges due to its continuous and implicit formulation. Since it often learns flows without explicitly defining intermediate representations or steps, it can be harder to trace the logic or pathways it uses to connect inputs to outputs. This makes standard interpretability tools less effective and calls for new techniques tailored to these continuous architectures.”
“This approach could have a real clinical impact,” said Robert Hirten, MD, associate professor of medicine and artificial intelligence, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, who also reviewed the study. “Accurately predicting transfusion needs and mortality risk in real time could support earlier, more targeted interventions for high-risk patients. While these findings still need to be validated in prospective studies, it could enhance ICU decision-making and resource allocation.”
“For the practicing gastroenterologist, we envision this system could help them figure out when to perform endoscopy in a patient admitted with acute gastrointestinal bleeding in the ICU at very high risk of exsanguination,” Zhang told GI & Hepatology News.
The approach, the researchers said, will be useful in identifying unique patient characteristics, make possible the identification of high-risk patients and lead to more personalized medicine.
Hirten, Zhang, and Shung had no disclosures. Glissen Brown reported consulting relationships with Medtronic, OdinVision, Doximity, and Olympus. The National Institutes of Health funded this study.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM DDW 2025
GLP-1s Treat and Even Reverse Some Forms of Liver Disease
In the past two decades, the global prevalence of metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (MASH) has increased dramatically as a result of the obesity epidemic. Researchers project that by 2040, rates of MASH will increase by 55%. Prior to that most liver diseases were caused by alcohol use and hepatitis C, a viral infection that primarily affects the liver.
MASH, a preventable form of liver disease previously called nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, is caused by a buildup of visceral fat cells that accumulate on top of the internal organs, in this case the liver, and keep it from functioning properly. The liver’s primary role is to filter blood, nutrients, and bile used for digestion, as well as to remove toxins from the body. Excess fat cells blanket the liver and keep it from working at full capacity.
Fat cells are also metabolically active and can cause a chronic state of inflammation in the part of the body where they reside. Over time, these fat cells can cause cirrhosis of the liver, or permanent scarring. Once patients reach this stage, the only option is a liver transplant.
New Research on GLP-1 Agonists and MASH
Until recently, the lone treatment for early-stage MASH was weight loss to reduce the number of fat cells that surround the internal organs. But new research has shown that glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists can reduce and even reverse the condition. In a study published in April, researchers were able to show that semaglutide resolved fatty liver and inflammation in over 60% of cases and decreased scar tissue in just over a third of patients.
“These findings suggest that semaglutide may prevent fatty liver disease from progressing to cirrhosis and can indeed reverse the course of the disease,” said Arun J. Sanyal, MD, study author and director of the Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia.
Another study published last year had a similar finding, showing that GLP-1 agonists were associated with less progression of the disease and reduced mortality in patients with MASH and diabetes. Another large-scale observational study found that GLP-1s reduced the risk for hepatic failure, which occurs when the liver is unable to perform basic functions, as well as liver cancer, both of which are downstream consequences of MASH.
How GLP-1s Improve Liver Function
“These medications reduce fat burden, which results in fat loss everywhere, including around the liver,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, an assistant professor in the Division of General Medicine & Geriatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “When fat cells are reduced in size and volume, the normal liver cells have more room to grow and function.”
These medications also seem to work on reducing the inflammation and oxidative stress caused by metabolic disease, which allows for a better environment for the liver to function.
“Fat is not an inert tissue, it’s metabolically active, causing a slow burn to all the cells surrounding it,” said Al-Aly. These medications keep the disease from progressing and reduce scarring, which improves the damage that’s already been done, he said.
Changing How Liver Disease Is Diagnosed
Physicians need to be vigilant in the way that they screen for the condition, said Charu Sawhney, DO, MPH, of Harbor Health in Round Rock, Texas. She said that if liver enzymes appear even slightly elevated, there still could be a reason to utilize GLP-1s to prevent later-stage MASH.
“Normal levels for liver enzymes in some patients can be lower than what labs show,” said Sawhney. This is especially true if a patient has other metabolic risk factors such as diabetes, obesity, or high cholesterol.
If liver enzymes continue to go up even after diet and lifestyle changes, patients might require liver imaging, specifically a wave-based ultrasound called elastography, which measures the elasticity or stiffness of tissues on the liver and can judge if certain portions of it have scarred or hardened. When liver cells change texture and become harder, the scan can estimate levels of fibrosis and, therefore, the stage of MASH that a patient is in.
Additionally, the severity of fatty liver disease depends on other factors besides weight and can sometimes be surprising.
“How bad fatty liver disease is in a patient isn’t always related to how much weight someone has gained,” said Carolynn Francavilla, MD, a nationally recognized obesity physician who owns and operates Green Mountain Partners for Health and Colorado Weight Care, both in Denver.
It’s important for physicians to realize that some patients with fatty liver disease might not have obesity as would be expected. For these patients, adipose tissue seems to accumulate on the liver before it does on other parts of the body. This could be related to the quality of our food system, including the use of sugar substitutes like high fructose corn syrup, which research has shown is even harder on the liver. There might also be a genetic propensity toward fat storage around the organs.
A New Way to Treat MASH
, said Francavilla. Right now, there’s not an official approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for prescribing GLP-1s in patients with MASH, but Francavilla hopes that it’s forthcoming.
“It will be really exciting to have these medications as a treatment option because right now there’s only one medication, and it’s for people who have pretty advanced fatty liver disease,” said Francavilla. This medication, called resmetirom, is approved by the FDA to target a protein in the liver to reduce fat and inflammation and scarring. But GLP-1s can be used much earlier to prevent the condition.
“With so many cases of MASH happening so much younger, it’s a disease that physicians really need to take seriously,” said Sawhney.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
In the past two decades, the global prevalence of metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (MASH) has increased dramatically as a result of the obesity epidemic. Researchers project that by 2040, rates of MASH will increase by 55%. Prior to that most liver diseases were caused by alcohol use and hepatitis C, a viral infection that primarily affects the liver.
MASH, a preventable form of liver disease previously called nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, is caused by a buildup of visceral fat cells that accumulate on top of the internal organs, in this case the liver, and keep it from functioning properly. The liver’s primary role is to filter blood, nutrients, and bile used for digestion, as well as to remove toxins from the body. Excess fat cells blanket the liver and keep it from working at full capacity.
Fat cells are also metabolically active and can cause a chronic state of inflammation in the part of the body where they reside. Over time, these fat cells can cause cirrhosis of the liver, or permanent scarring. Once patients reach this stage, the only option is a liver transplant.
New Research on GLP-1 Agonists and MASH
Until recently, the lone treatment for early-stage MASH was weight loss to reduce the number of fat cells that surround the internal organs. But new research has shown that glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists can reduce and even reverse the condition. In a study published in April, researchers were able to show that semaglutide resolved fatty liver and inflammation in over 60% of cases and decreased scar tissue in just over a third of patients.
“These findings suggest that semaglutide may prevent fatty liver disease from progressing to cirrhosis and can indeed reverse the course of the disease,” said Arun J. Sanyal, MD, study author and director of the Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia.
Another study published last year had a similar finding, showing that GLP-1 agonists were associated with less progression of the disease and reduced mortality in patients with MASH and diabetes. Another large-scale observational study found that GLP-1s reduced the risk for hepatic failure, which occurs when the liver is unable to perform basic functions, as well as liver cancer, both of which are downstream consequences of MASH.
How GLP-1s Improve Liver Function
“These medications reduce fat burden, which results in fat loss everywhere, including around the liver,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, an assistant professor in the Division of General Medicine & Geriatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “When fat cells are reduced in size and volume, the normal liver cells have more room to grow and function.”
These medications also seem to work on reducing the inflammation and oxidative stress caused by metabolic disease, which allows for a better environment for the liver to function.
“Fat is not an inert tissue, it’s metabolically active, causing a slow burn to all the cells surrounding it,” said Al-Aly. These medications keep the disease from progressing and reduce scarring, which improves the damage that’s already been done, he said.
Changing How Liver Disease Is Diagnosed
Physicians need to be vigilant in the way that they screen for the condition, said Charu Sawhney, DO, MPH, of Harbor Health in Round Rock, Texas. She said that if liver enzymes appear even slightly elevated, there still could be a reason to utilize GLP-1s to prevent later-stage MASH.
“Normal levels for liver enzymes in some patients can be lower than what labs show,” said Sawhney. This is especially true if a patient has other metabolic risk factors such as diabetes, obesity, or high cholesterol.
If liver enzymes continue to go up even after diet and lifestyle changes, patients might require liver imaging, specifically a wave-based ultrasound called elastography, which measures the elasticity or stiffness of tissues on the liver and can judge if certain portions of it have scarred or hardened. When liver cells change texture and become harder, the scan can estimate levels of fibrosis and, therefore, the stage of MASH that a patient is in.
Additionally, the severity of fatty liver disease depends on other factors besides weight and can sometimes be surprising.
“How bad fatty liver disease is in a patient isn’t always related to how much weight someone has gained,” said Carolynn Francavilla, MD, a nationally recognized obesity physician who owns and operates Green Mountain Partners for Health and Colorado Weight Care, both in Denver.
It’s important for physicians to realize that some patients with fatty liver disease might not have obesity as would be expected. For these patients, adipose tissue seems to accumulate on the liver before it does on other parts of the body. This could be related to the quality of our food system, including the use of sugar substitutes like high fructose corn syrup, which research has shown is even harder on the liver. There might also be a genetic propensity toward fat storage around the organs.
A New Way to Treat MASH
, said Francavilla. Right now, there’s not an official approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for prescribing GLP-1s in patients with MASH, but Francavilla hopes that it’s forthcoming.
“It will be really exciting to have these medications as a treatment option because right now there’s only one medication, and it’s for people who have pretty advanced fatty liver disease,” said Francavilla. This medication, called resmetirom, is approved by the FDA to target a protein in the liver to reduce fat and inflammation and scarring. But GLP-1s can be used much earlier to prevent the condition.
“With so many cases of MASH happening so much younger, it’s a disease that physicians really need to take seriously,” said Sawhney.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
In the past two decades, the global prevalence of metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (MASH) has increased dramatically as a result of the obesity epidemic. Researchers project that by 2040, rates of MASH will increase by 55%. Prior to that most liver diseases were caused by alcohol use and hepatitis C, a viral infection that primarily affects the liver.
MASH, a preventable form of liver disease previously called nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, is caused by a buildup of visceral fat cells that accumulate on top of the internal organs, in this case the liver, and keep it from functioning properly. The liver’s primary role is to filter blood, nutrients, and bile used for digestion, as well as to remove toxins from the body. Excess fat cells blanket the liver and keep it from working at full capacity.
Fat cells are also metabolically active and can cause a chronic state of inflammation in the part of the body where they reside. Over time, these fat cells can cause cirrhosis of the liver, or permanent scarring. Once patients reach this stage, the only option is a liver transplant.
New Research on GLP-1 Agonists and MASH
Until recently, the lone treatment for early-stage MASH was weight loss to reduce the number of fat cells that surround the internal organs. But new research has shown that glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists can reduce and even reverse the condition. In a study published in April, researchers were able to show that semaglutide resolved fatty liver and inflammation in over 60% of cases and decreased scar tissue in just over a third of patients.
“These findings suggest that semaglutide may prevent fatty liver disease from progressing to cirrhosis and can indeed reverse the course of the disease,” said Arun J. Sanyal, MD, study author and director of the Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia.
Another study published last year had a similar finding, showing that GLP-1 agonists were associated with less progression of the disease and reduced mortality in patients with MASH and diabetes. Another large-scale observational study found that GLP-1s reduced the risk for hepatic failure, which occurs when the liver is unable to perform basic functions, as well as liver cancer, both of which are downstream consequences of MASH.
How GLP-1s Improve Liver Function
“These medications reduce fat burden, which results in fat loss everywhere, including around the liver,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, an assistant professor in the Division of General Medicine & Geriatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “When fat cells are reduced in size and volume, the normal liver cells have more room to grow and function.”
These medications also seem to work on reducing the inflammation and oxidative stress caused by metabolic disease, which allows for a better environment for the liver to function.
“Fat is not an inert tissue, it’s metabolically active, causing a slow burn to all the cells surrounding it,” said Al-Aly. These medications keep the disease from progressing and reduce scarring, which improves the damage that’s already been done, he said.
Changing How Liver Disease Is Diagnosed
Physicians need to be vigilant in the way that they screen for the condition, said Charu Sawhney, DO, MPH, of Harbor Health in Round Rock, Texas. She said that if liver enzymes appear even slightly elevated, there still could be a reason to utilize GLP-1s to prevent later-stage MASH.
“Normal levels for liver enzymes in some patients can be lower than what labs show,” said Sawhney. This is especially true if a patient has other metabolic risk factors such as diabetes, obesity, or high cholesterol.
If liver enzymes continue to go up even after diet and lifestyle changes, patients might require liver imaging, specifically a wave-based ultrasound called elastography, which measures the elasticity or stiffness of tissues on the liver and can judge if certain portions of it have scarred or hardened. When liver cells change texture and become harder, the scan can estimate levels of fibrosis and, therefore, the stage of MASH that a patient is in.
Additionally, the severity of fatty liver disease depends on other factors besides weight and can sometimes be surprising.
“How bad fatty liver disease is in a patient isn’t always related to how much weight someone has gained,” said Carolynn Francavilla, MD, a nationally recognized obesity physician who owns and operates Green Mountain Partners for Health and Colorado Weight Care, both in Denver.
It’s important for physicians to realize that some patients with fatty liver disease might not have obesity as would be expected. For these patients, adipose tissue seems to accumulate on the liver before it does on other parts of the body. This could be related to the quality of our food system, including the use of sugar substitutes like high fructose corn syrup, which research has shown is even harder on the liver. There might also be a genetic propensity toward fat storage around the organs.
A New Way to Treat MASH
, said Francavilla. Right now, there’s not an official approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for prescribing GLP-1s in patients with MASH, but Francavilla hopes that it’s forthcoming.
“It will be really exciting to have these medications as a treatment option because right now there’s only one medication, and it’s for people who have pretty advanced fatty liver disease,” said Francavilla. This medication, called resmetirom, is approved by the FDA to target a protein in the liver to reduce fat and inflammation and scarring. But GLP-1s can be used much earlier to prevent the condition.
“With so many cases of MASH happening so much younger, it’s a disease that physicians really need to take seriously,” said Sawhney.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Ostomy Innovation Grabs ‘Shark Tank’ Win
The “Shark Tank” winning innovation at the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) Tech Summit in Chicago this April has “life-altering” potential for ostomy patients, according to one of the judges, and eliminates the need for constant pouch wear.
The innovation is called Twistomy and it is designed to replace current ostomy-pouch systems that can cause leaks, odor, skin irritation, embarrassment, and social and emotional distress. The AGA Committee for GI Innovation and Technology (CGIT) organizes the annual Tech Summit.
Twistomy’s winning design includes a flexible ring and sleeve, which are inserted into the stoma and secured on the outside with a set of rings that make up the housing unit attached to a standard wafer. The housing unit twists the sleeve closed, allowing the user to control fecal output. For evacuation, the user attaches a pouch, untwists the sleeve, evacuates cleanly and effectively, and then discards the pouch.
Twistomy cofounders Devon Horton, BS, senior bioengineer, and Lily Williams, BS, biomedical researcher and engineer, both work for the department of surgery at University of Colorado, Denver.
Horton said in an interview that when he was approached with the idea to create a better ostomy solution for a senior-year capstone project he was intrigued because the traditional ostomy system “has not changed in more than 70 years. It was crazy that no one had done anything to change that.”
The Twistomy team also won the Grand Prize this spring at the Emerging Medical Innovation Valuation Competition at the Design of Medical Devices Conference held at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
Witnessing the Struggle as a CNA
Horton also works as a certified nursing assistant at an inpatient unit at University of Colorado Hospital and the ostomy patients he sees there every shift help drive his passion to find a better solution.
He hears the emotional stories of people who manage their ostomy daily.
“Many express feelings of depression and anxiety, feeling isolated with their severe inability to go out and do things because of the fear of the noise the stoma makes, or the crinkling of the plastic bag in a yoga class,” he said. “We want to help them regain that control of quality of life.”
They also hope to cut down on the ostomy management time. “Initial user testing [for Twistomy] was less than 75 seconds to insert and assemble,” he said. “I did an interview with a patient yesterday who said they probably spend an hour a day managing their ostomy,” including cleaning and replacing.
Horton and Williams have a patent on the device and currently use three-dimensional printing for the prototypes.
Williams said they are now conducting consumer discovery studies through the National Science Foundation and are interviewing 30 stakeholders — “anyone who has a relationship with an ostomy,” whether a colorectal surgeon, a gastrointestinal nurse, ostomy patients, or insurers.
Those interviews will help in refining the device so they can start consulting with manufacturers and work toward approval as a Class II medical device from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Williams said.
Saving Healthcare Costs
Another potential benefit for Twistomy is its ability to cut healthcare costs, Horton said. Traditional ostomies are prone to leakage, which can lead to peristomal skin complications.
He pointed to a National Institutes of Health analysis that found that on average peristomal skin complications caused upwards of $80,000 more per ostomy patient in increased healthcare costs over a 3-month period than for those without the complications.
“With Twistomy, we are reducing leakage most likely to zero,” Horton said. “We set out to say if we could reduce [infections] by half or a little less than half, we can cut out those tens of thousands of dollars that insurance companies and payers are spending.”
Permanent and Temporary Ostomy Markets
He pointed out that not all ostomies are permanent ostomies, adding that the reversal rate “is about 65%.” Often those reversal surgeries cannot take place until peristomal skin complications have been healed.
“We’re not only hoping to market to the permanent stoma patients, but the patients with temporary stomas as well,” he said.
The team estimates it will need $4 million–$6 million in funding for manufacturing and consultation costs as well as costs involved in seeking FDA approval.
Horton and Williams project the housing unit cost will be $399 based on known out-of-pocket expenses for patients with ostomy care products and the unit would be replaced annually. Disposable elements would be an additional cost.
Assuming insurance acceptance of the product, he said, “With about an 80/20 insurance coverage, typical for many patients, it would be about $100 in out-of-pocket expenses per month to use our device, which is around the lower end of what a lot of patients are spending out of pocket.”
One of the Tech Summit judges, Somaya Albhaisi, MD, a gastroenterology/hepatology fellow at University of Southern California, Los Angeles, said in an interview that the Shark Tank results were unanimous among the five judges and Twistomy also took the fan favorite vote.
She said the teams were judged on quality of pitch, potential clinical impact, and feasibility of business plan. Teams got 5-7 minutes to pitch and answered questions afterward.
“Deep Understanding” of Patient Need
“They combined smart engineering with deep understanding of patient need, which is restoring control, dignity, and quality of life for ostomy users while also reducing healthcare costs. It is rare to see a solution this scalable and impactful. It was a deeply empathetic solution overall.” She noted that nearly 1 million people in the United States currently use an ostomy.
Ostomy users’ quality of life is compromised, and they often have mental health challenges, Albhaisi said. This innovation appears to offer easy use, more dignity and control.
The other four Shark Tank finalists were:
- AI Lumen, which developed a retroview camera system, which attaches to the colonoscope and enhances imaging to detect hidden polyps that may evade conventional endoscopes.
- Amplified Sciences, which developed an ultrasensitive diagnostic platform that detects biomarker activities in minute volumes of fluid from pancreatic cystic lesions, helping to stratify patients into low risk or potential malignancy, reducing unneeded surgeries, costs, and comorbidities.
- KITE Endoscopic Innovations, which designed the Dynaflex TruCut needle to offer a simpler endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)–guided biopsy procedure with fewer needle passes, deeper insights into tumor pathology, and more tissue for geonomic analysis.
- MicroSteer, which designed a device to facilitate semiautomated endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) by decoupling the dissecting knife from the endoscope, enhancing safety and effectiveness during the procedure.
The Twistomy Team “Surprised Everyone”
The competitors’ scores were “very close,” one of the judges, Kevin Berliner, said in an interview. “The Twistomy team surprised everyone — the judges and the crowd — with their succinct, informative, and impactful pitch. That presentation disparity was the tiebreaker for me,” said Berliner, who works for Medtronic, a sponsor of the competition, in Chicago.
He said Horton and Williams were the youngest presenters and had the earliest stage pitch they judged, but they “outpresented other competitors in clarity, simplification, and storytelling.”
Also impressive was their description of their “commercially viable path to success” and their plan for the challenges ahead, he said.
Those challenges to get Twistomy to market center “on the ongoing changing climate we have with research funds lately,” Horton said. “We’re giving it an estimate of 3-5 years.”
Horton, Williams, Albhaisi, and Berliner reported no relevant financial relationships.
The “Shark Tank” winning innovation at the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) Tech Summit in Chicago this April has “life-altering” potential for ostomy patients, according to one of the judges, and eliminates the need for constant pouch wear.
The innovation is called Twistomy and it is designed to replace current ostomy-pouch systems that can cause leaks, odor, skin irritation, embarrassment, and social and emotional distress. The AGA Committee for GI Innovation and Technology (CGIT) organizes the annual Tech Summit.
Twistomy’s winning design includes a flexible ring and sleeve, which are inserted into the stoma and secured on the outside with a set of rings that make up the housing unit attached to a standard wafer. The housing unit twists the sleeve closed, allowing the user to control fecal output. For evacuation, the user attaches a pouch, untwists the sleeve, evacuates cleanly and effectively, and then discards the pouch.
Twistomy cofounders Devon Horton, BS, senior bioengineer, and Lily Williams, BS, biomedical researcher and engineer, both work for the department of surgery at University of Colorado, Denver.
Horton said in an interview that when he was approached with the idea to create a better ostomy solution for a senior-year capstone project he was intrigued because the traditional ostomy system “has not changed in more than 70 years. It was crazy that no one had done anything to change that.”
The Twistomy team also won the Grand Prize this spring at the Emerging Medical Innovation Valuation Competition at the Design of Medical Devices Conference held at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
Witnessing the Struggle as a CNA
Horton also works as a certified nursing assistant at an inpatient unit at University of Colorado Hospital and the ostomy patients he sees there every shift help drive his passion to find a better solution.
He hears the emotional stories of people who manage their ostomy daily.
“Many express feelings of depression and anxiety, feeling isolated with their severe inability to go out and do things because of the fear of the noise the stoma makes, or the crinkling of the plastic bag in a yoga class,” he said. “We want to help them regain that control of quality of life.”
They also hope to cut down on the ostomy management time. “Initial user testing [for Twistomy] was less than 75 seconds to insert and assemble,” he said. “I did an interview with a patient yesterday who said they probably spend an hour a day managing their ostomy,” including cleaning and replacing.
Horton and Williams have a patent on the device and currently use three-dimensional printing for the prototypes.
Williams said they are now conducting consumer discovery studies through the National Science Foundation and are interviewing 30 stakeholders — “anyone who has a relationship with an ostomy,” whether a colorectal surgeon, a gastrointestinal nurse, ostomy patients, or insurers.
Those interviews will help in refining the device so they can start consulting with manufacturers and work toward approval as a Class II medical device from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Williams said.
Saving Healthcare Costs
Another potential benefit for Twistomy is its ability to cut healthcare costs, Horton said. Traditional ostomies are prone to leakage, which can lead to peristomal skin complications.
He pointed to a National Institutes of Health analysis that found that on average peristomal skin complications caused upwards of $80,000 more per ostomy patient in increased healthcare costs over a 3-month period than for those without the complications.
“With Twistomy, we are reducing leakage most likely to zero,” Horton said. “We set out to say if we could reduce [infections] by half or a little less than half, we can cut out those tens of thousands of dollars that insurance companies and payers are spending.”
Permanent and Temporary Ostomy Markets
He pointed out that not all ostomies are permanent ostomies, adding that the reversal rate “is about 65%.” Often those reversal surgeries cannot take place until peristomal skin complications have been healed.
“We’re not only hoping to market to the permanent stoma patients, but the patients with temporary stomas as well,” he said.
The team estimates it will need $4 million–$6 million in funding for manufacturing and consultation costs as well as costs involved in seeking FDA approval.
Horton and Williams project the housing unit cost will be $399 based on known out-of-pocket expenses for patients with ostomy care products and the unit would be replaced annually. Disposable elements would be an additional cost.
Assuming insurance acceptance of the product, he said, “With about an 80/20 insurance coverage, typical for many patients, it would be about $100 in out-of-pocket expenses per month to use our device, which is around the lower end of what a lot of patients are spending out of pocket.”
One of the Tech Summit judges, Somaya Albhaisi, MD, a gastroenterology/hepatology fellow at University of Southern California, Los Angeles, said in an interview that the Shark Tank results were unanimous among the five judges and Twistomy also took the fan favorite vote.
She said the teams were judged on quality of pitch, potential clinical impact, and feasibility of business plan. Teams got 5-7 minutes to pitch and answered questions afterward.
“Deep Understanding” of Patient Need
“They combined smart engineering with deep understanding of patient need, which is restoring control, dignity, and quality of life for ostomy users while also reducing healthcare costs. It is rare to see a solution this scalable and impactful. It was a deeply empathetic solution overall.” She noted that nearly 1 million people in the United States currently use an ostomy.
Ostomy users’ quality of life is compromised, and they often have mental health challenges, Albhaisi said. This innovation appears to offer easy use, more dignity and control.
The other four Shark Tank finalists were:
- AI Lumen, which developed a retroview camera system, which attaches to the colonoscope and enhances imaging to detect hidden polyps that may evade conventional endoscopes.
- Amplified Sciences, which developed an ultrasensitive diagnostic platform that detects biomarker activities in minute volumes of fluid from pancreatic cystic lesions, helping to stratify patients into low risk or potential malignancy, reducing unneeded surgeries, costs, and comorbidities.
- KITE Endoscopic Innovations, which designed the Dynaflex TruCut needle to offer a simpler endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)–guided biopsy procedure with fewer needle passes, deeper insights into tumor pathology, and more tissue for geonomic analysis.
- MicroSteer, which designed a device to facilitate semiautomated endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) by decoupling the dissecting knife from the endoscope, enhancing safety and effectiveness during the procedure.
The Twistomy Team “Surprised Everyone”
The competitors’ scores were “very close,” one of the judges, Kevin Berliner, said in an interview. “The Twistomy team surprised everyone — the judges and the crowd — with their succinct, informative, and impactful pitch. That presentation disparity was the tiebreaker for me,” said Berliner, who works for Medtronic, a sponsor of the competition, in Chicago.
He said Horton and Williams were the youngest presenters and had the earliest stage pitch they judged, but they “outpresented other competitors in clarity, simplification, and storytelling.”
Also impressive was their description of their “commercially viable path to success” and their plan for the challenges ahead, he said.
Those challenges to get Twistomy to market center “on the ongoing changing climate we have with research funds lately,” Horton said. “We’re giving it an estimate of 3-5 years.”
Horton, Williams, Albhaisi, and Berliner reported no relevant financial relationships.
The “Shark Tank” winning innovation at the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) Tech Summit in Chicago this April has “life-altering” potential for ostomy patients, according to one of the judges, and eliminates the need for constant pouch wear.
The innovation is called Twistomy and it is designed to replace current ostomy-pouch systems that can cause leaks, odor, skin irritation, embarrassment, and social and emotional distress. The AGA Committee for GI Innovation and Technology (CGIT) organizes the annual Tech Summit.
Twistomy’s winning design includes a flexible ring and sleeve, which are inserted into the stoma and secured on the outside with a set of rings that make up the housing unit attached to a standard wafer. The housing unit twists the sleeve closed, allowing the user to control fecal output. For evacuation, the user attaches a pouch, untwists the sleeve, evacuates cleanly and effectively, and then discards the pouch.
Twistomy cofounders Devon Horton, BS, senior bioengineer, and Lily Williams, BS, biomedical researcher and engineer, both work for the department of surgery at University of Colorado, Denver.
Horton said in an interview that when he was approached with the idea to create a better ostomy solution for a senior-year capstone project he was intrigued because the traditional ostomy system “has not changed in more than 70 years. It was crazy that no one had done anything to change that.”
The Twistomy team also won the Grand Prize this spring at the Emerging Medical Innovation Valuation Competition at the Design of Medical Devices Conference held at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
Witnessing the Struggle as a CNA
Horton also works as a certified nursing assistant at an inpatient unit at University of Colorado Hospital and the ostomy patients he sees there every shift help drive his passion to find a better solution.
He hears the emotional stories of people who manage their ostomy daily.
“Many express feelings of depression and anxiety, feeling isolated with their severe inability to go out and do things because of the fear of the noise the stoma makes, or the crinkling of the plastic bag in a yoga class,” he said. “We want to help them regain that control of quality of life.”
They also hope to cut down on the ostomy management time. “Initial user testing [for Twistomy] was less than 75 seconds to insert and assemble,” he said. “I did an interview with a patient yesterday who said they probably spend an hour a day managing their ostomy,” including cleaning and replacing.
Horton and Williams have a patent on the device and currently use three-dimensional printing for the prototypes.
Williams said they are now conducting consumer discovery studies through the National Science Foundation and are interviewing 30 stakeholders — “anyone who has a relationship with an ostomy,” whether a colorectal surgeon, a gastrointestinal nurse, ostomy patients, or insurers.
Those interviews will help in refining the device so they can start consulting with manufacturers and work toward approval as a Class II medical device from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Williams said.
Saving Healthcare Costs
Another potential benefit for Twistomy is its ability to cut healthcare costs, Horton said. Traditional ostomies are prone to leakage, which can lead to peristomal skin complications.
He pointed to a National Institutes of Health analysis that found that on average peristomal skin complications caused upwards of $80,000 more per ostomy patient in increased healthcare costs over a 3-month period than for those without the complications.
“With Twistomy, we are reducing leakage most likely to zero,” Horton said. “We set out to say if we could reduce [infections] by half or a little less than half, we can cut out those tens of thousands of dollars that insurance companies and payers are spending.”
Permanent and Temporary Ostomy Markets
He pointed out that not all ostomies are permanent ostomies, adding that the reversal rate “is about 65%.” Often those reversal surgeries cannot take place until peristomal skin complications have been healed.
“We’re not only hoping to market to the permanent stoma patients, but the patients with temporary stomas as well,” he said.
The team estimates it will need $4 million–$6 million in funding for manufacturing and consultation costs as well as costs involved in seeking FDA approval.
Horton and Williams project the housing unit cost will be $399 based on known out-of-pocket expenses for patients with ostomy care products and the unit would be replaced annually. Disposable elements would be an additional cost.
Assuming insurance acceptance of the product, he said, “With about an 80/20 insurance coverage, typical for many patients, it would be about $100 in out-of-pocket expenses per month to use our device, which is around the lower end of what a lot of patients are spending out of pocket.”
One of the Tech Summit judges, Somaya Albhaisi, MD, a gastroenterology/hepatology fellow at University of Southern California, Los Angeles, said in an interview that the Shark Tank results were unanimous among the five judges and Twistomy also took the fan favorite vote.
She said the teams were judged on quality of pitch, potential clinical impact, and feasibility of business plan. Teams got 5-7 minutes to pitch and answered questions afterward.
“Deep Understanding” of Patient Need
“They combined smart engineering with deep understanding of patient need, which is restoring control, dignity, and quality of life for ostomy users while also reducing healthcare costs. It is rare to see a solution this scalable and impactful. It was a deeply empathetic solution overall.” She noted that nearly 1 million people in the United States currently use an ostomy.
Ostomy users’ quality of life is compromised, and they often have mental health challenges, Albhaisi said. This innovation appears to offer easy use, more dignity and control.
The other four Shark Tank finalists were:
- AI Lumen, which developed a retroview camera system, which attaches to the colonoscope and enhances imaging to detect hidden polyps that may evade conventional endoscopes.
- Amplified Sciences, which developed an ultrasensitive diagnostic platform that detects biomarker activities in minute volumes of fluid from pancreatic cystic lesions, helping to stratify patients into low risk or potential malignancy, reducing unneeded surgeries, costs, and comorbidities.
- KITE Endoscopic Innovations, which designed the Dynaflex TruCut needle to offer a simpler endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)–guided biopsy procedure with fewer needle passes, deeper insights into tumor pathology, and more tissue for geonomic analysis.
- MicroSteer, which designed a device to facilitate semiautomated endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) by decoupling the dissecting knife from the endoscope, enhancing safety and effectiveness during the procedure.
The Twistomy Team “Surprised Everyone”
The competitors’ scores were “very close,” one of the judges, Kevin Berliner, said in an interview. “The Twistomy team surprised everyone — the judges and the crowd — with their succinct, informative, and impactful pitch. That presentation disparity was the tiebreaker for me,” said Berliner, who works for Medtronic, a sponsor of the competition, in Chicago.
He said Horton and Williams were the youngest presenters and had the earliest stage pitch they judged, but they “outpresented other competitors in clarity, simplification, and storytelling.”
Also impressive was their description of their “commercially viable path to success” and their plan for the challenges ahead, he said.
Those challenges to get Twistomy to market center “on the ongoing changing climate we have with research funds lately,” Horton said. “We’re giving it an estimate of 3-5 years.”
Horton, Williams, Albhaisi, and Berliner reported no relevant financial relationships.
Chatbot Helps Users Adopt a Low FODMAP Diet
SAN DIEGO — Low fermentable oligo-, di-, and monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAPs) dietary advice has been shown to be effective in easing bloating and abdominal pain, especially in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but limited availability of dietitians makes delivering this advice challenging. Researchers from Thailand have successfully enlisted a chatbot to help.
In a randomized controlled trial, they found that chatbot-assisted dietary advice with brief guidance effectively reduced high FODMAP intake, bloating severity, and improved dietary knowledge, particularly in patients with bothersome bloating.
“Chatbot-assisted dietary advice for FODMAPs restriction was feasible and applicable in patients with bloating symptoms that had baseline symptoms of moderate severity,” study chief Pochara Somvanapanich, with the Division of Gastroenterology, Chulalongkorn University and King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand, told GI & Hepatology News.
Somvanapanich, who developed the chatbot algorithm, presented the study results at Digestive Disease Week (DDW) 2025.
More Knowledge, Less Bloating
The trial enrolled 86 adults with disorders of gut-brain interaction experiencing bloating symptoms for more than 6 months and consuming more than seven high-FODMAPs items per week. Half of them had IBS.
At baseline, gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms and the ability to identify FODMAPs were assessed. All participants received a 5-minute consultation on FODMAPs avoidance from a GI fellow and were randomly allocated (stratified by IBS diagnosis and education) into two groups.
The chatbot-assisted group received real-time dietary advice via a chatbot which helped them identify high, low, and non-FODMAP foods from a list of more than 300 ingredients/dishes of Thai and western cuisines.
The control group received only brief advice on high FODMAPs restriction. Both groups used a diary app to log food intake and postprandial symptoms. Baseline bloating, abdominal pain and global symptoms severity were similar between the two groups. Data on 64 participants (32 in each group) were analyzed.
After 4 weeks, significantly more people in the chatbot group than the control group responded — achieving a 30% or greater reduction in daily worst bloating, abdominal pain or global symptoms (19 [59%] vs 10 [31%], P < .05). Responder rates were similar in the IBS and non-IBS subgroups.
Subgroup analysis revealed significant differences between groups only for participants with bothersome bloating, not those with mild bloating severity.
In those with bothersome bloating severity, the chatbot group had a higher response rate (69.5% vs 36.3%) and fewer bloating symptoms (P < .05). They also had a greater reduction in high FODMAPs intake (10 vs 23 items/week) and demonstrated improved knowledge in identifying FODMAPs (P < .05).
“Responders in a chatbot group consistently engaged more with the app, performing significantly more weekly item searches than nonresponders (P < .05),” the authors noted in their conference abstract.
“Our next step is to develop the chatbot-assisted approach for the reintroduction and personalization phase based on messenger applications (including Facebook Messenger and other messaging platforms),” Somvanapanich told GI & Hepatology News.
“Once we’ve gathered enough data to confirm these are working effectively, we definitely plan to create a one-stop service application for FODMAPs dietary advice,” Somvanapanich added.
Lack of Robust Data on Digital GI Health Apps
Commenting on this research for GI & Hepatology News, Sidhartha R. Sinha, MD, Director of Digital Health and Innovation, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University in Stanford, California, noted that there is a “notable lack of robust data supporting digital health tools in gastroenterology. Despite hundreds of apps available, very few are supported by well-designed trials.”
“The study demonstrated that chatbot-assisted dietary advice significantly improved bloating symptoms, reduced intake of high-FODMAP foods, and enhanced patients’ dietary knowledge compared to brief dietary counseling alone, especially in those with bothersome symptoms,” said Sinha, who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Patients actively used the chatbot to manage their symptoms, achieving a higher response rate than those in the control arm who received brief counseling on avoiding high-FODMAP food,” he noted.
Sinha said in his practice at Stanford, “in the heart of Silicon Valley,” patients do use digital resources to manage their GI symptoms, including diseases like IBS and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — and he believes this is “increasingly common nationally.”
“However, the need for evidence-based tools is critical and the lack here often prevents many practitioners from regularly recommending them to patients. This study aligns well with clinical practice, and supports the use of this particular app to improve IBS symptoms, particularly when access to dietitians is limited. These results support chatbot-assisted dietary management as a feasible, effective, and scalable approach to patient care,” Sinha told GI & Hepatology News.
The study received no commercial funding. Somvanapanich and Sinha had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — Low fermentable oligo-, di-, and monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAPs) dietary advice has been shown to be effective in easing bloating and abdominal pain, especially in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but limited availability of dietitians makes delivering this advice challenging. Researchers from Thailand have successfully enlisted a chatbot to help.
In a randomized controlled trial, they found that chatbot-assisted dietary advice with brief guidance effectively reduced high FODMAP intake, bloating severity, and improved dietary knowledge, particularly in patients with bothersome bloating.
“Chatbot-assisted dietary advice for FODMAPs restriction was feasible and applicable in patients with bloating symptoms that had baseline symptoms of moderate severity,” study chief Pochara Somvanapanich, with the Division of Gastroenterology, Chulalongkorn University and King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand, told GI & Hepatology News.
Somvanapanich, who developed the chatbot algorithm, presented the study results at Digestive Disease Week (DDW) 2025.
More Knowledge, Less Bloating
The trial enrolled 86 adults with disorders of gut-brain interaction experiencing bloating symptoms for more than 6 months and consuming more than seven high-FODMAPs items per week. Half of them had IBS.
At baseline, gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms and the ability to identify FODMAPs were assessed. All participants received a 5-minute consultation on FODMAPs avoidance from a GI fellow and were randomly allocated (stratified by IBS diagnosis and education) into two groups.
The chatbot-assisted group received real-time dietary advice via a chatbot which helped them identify high, low, and non-FODMAP foods from a list of more than 300 ingredients/dishes of Thai and western cuisines.
The control group received only brief advice on high FODMAPs restriction. Both groups used a diary app to log food intake and postprandial symptoms. Baseline bloating, abdominal pain and global symptoms severity were similar between the two groups. Data on 64 participants (32 in each group) were analyzed.
After 4 weeks, significantly more people in the chatbot group than the control group responded — achieving a 30% or greater reduction in daily worst bloating, abdominal pain or global symptoms (19 [59%] vs 10 [31%], P < .05). Responder rates were similar in the IBS and non-IBS subgroups.
Subgroup analysis revealed significant differences between groups only for participants with bothersome bloating, not those with mild bloating severity.
In those with bothersome bloating severity, the chatbot group had a higher response rate (69.5% vs 36.3%) and fewer bloating symptoms (P < .05). They also had a greater reduction in high FODMAPs intake (10 vs 23 items/week) and demonstrated improved knowledge in identifying FODMAPs (P < .05).
“Responders in a chatbot group consistently engaged more with the app, performing significantly more weekly item searches than nonresponders (P < .05),” the authors noted in their conference abstract.
“Our next step is to develop the chatbot-assisted approach for the reintroduction and personalization phase based on messenger applications (including Facebook Messenger and other messaging platforms),” Somvanapanich told GI & Hepatology News.
“Once we’ve gathered enough data to confirm these are working effectively, we definitely plan to create a one-stop service application for FODMAPs dietary advice,” Somvanapanich added.
Lack of Robust Data on Digital GI Health Apps
Commenting on this research for GI & Hepatology News, Sidhartha R. Sinha, MD, Director of Digital Health and Innovation, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University in Stanford, California, noted that there is a “notable lack of robust data supporting digital health tools in gastroenterology. Despite hundreds of apps available, very few are supported by well-designed trials.”
“The study demonstrated that chatbot-assisted dietary advice significantly improved bloating symptoms, reduced intake of high-FODMAP foods, and enhanced patients’ dietary knowledge compared to brief dietary counseling alone, especially in those with bothersome symptoms,” said Sinha, who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Patients actively used the chatbot to manage their symptoms, achieving a higher response rate than those in the control arm who received brief counseling on avoiding high-FODMAP food,” he noted.
Sinha said in his practice at Stanford, “in the heart of Silicon Valley,” patients do use digital resources to manage their GI symptoms, including diseases like IBS and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — and he believes this is “increasingly common nationally.”
“However, the need for evidence-based tools is critical and the lack here often prevents many practitioners from regularly recommending them to patients. This study aligns well with clinical practice, and supports the use of this particular app to improve IBS symptoms, particularly when access to dietitians is limited. These results support chatbot-assisted dietary management as a feasible, effective, and scalable approach to patient care,” Sinha told GI & Hepatology News.
The study received no commercial funding. Somvanapanich and Sinha had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — Low fermentable oligo-, di-, and monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAPs) dietary advice has been shown to be effective in easing bloating and abdominal pain, especially in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but limited availability of dietitians makes delivering this advice challenging. Researchers from Thailand have successfully enlisted a chatbot to help.
In a randomized controlled trial, they found that chatbot-assisted dietary advice with brief guidance effectively reduced high FODMAP intake, bloating severity, and improved dietary knowledge, particularly in patients with bothersome bloating.
“Chatbot-assisted dietary advice for FODMAPs restriction was feasible and applicable in patients with bloating symptoms that had baseline symptoms of moderate severity,” study chief Pochara Somvanapanich, with the Division of Gastroenterology, Chulalongkorn University and King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand, told GI & Hepatology News.
Somvanapanich, who developed the chatbot algorithm, presented the study results at Digestive Disease Week (DDW) 2025.
More Knowledge, Less Bloating
The trial enrolled 86 adults with disorders of gut-brain interaction experiencing bloating symptoms for more than 6 months and consuming more than seven high-FODMAPs items per week. Half of them had IBS.
At baseline, gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms and the ability to identify FODMAPs were assessed. All participants received a 5-minute consultation on FODMAPs avoidance from a GI fellow and were randomly allocated (stratified by IBS diagnosis and education) into two groups.
The chatbot-assisted group received real-time dietary advice via a chatbot which helped them identify high, low, and non-FODMAP foods from a list of more than 300 ingredients/dishes of Thai and western cuisines.
The control group received only brief advice on high FODMAPs restriction. Both groups used a diary app to log food intake and postprandial symptoms. Baseline bloating, abdominal pain and global symptoms severity were similar between the two groups. Data on 64 participants (32 in each group) were analyzed.
After 4 weeks, significantly more people in the chatbot group than the control group responded — achieving a 30% or greater reduction in daily worst bloating, abdominal pain or global symptoms (19 [59%] vs 10 [31%], P < .05). Responder rates were similar in the IBS and non-IBS subgroups.
Subgroup analysis revealed significant differences between groups only for participants with bothersome bloating, not those with mild bloating severity.
In those with bothersome bloating severity, the chatbot group had a higher response rate (69.5% vs 36.3%) and fewer bloating symptoms (P < .05). They also had a greater reduction in high FODMAPs intake (10 vs 23 items/week) and demonstrated improved knowledge in identifying FODMAPs (P < .05).
“Responders in a chatbot group consistently engaged more with the app, performing significantly more weekly item searches than nonresponders (P < .05),” the authors noted in their conference abstract.
“Our next step is to develop the chatbot-assisted approach for the reintroduction and personalization phase based on messenger applications (including Facebook Messenger and other messaging platforms),” Somvanapanich told GI & Hepatology News.
“Once we’ve gathered enough data to confirm these are working effectively, we definitely plan to create a one-stop service application for FODMAPs dietary advice,” Somvanapanich added.
Lack of Robust Data on Digital GI Health Apps
Commenting on this research for GI & Hepatology News, Sidhartha R. Sinha, MD, Director of Digital Health and Innovation, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University in Stanford, California, noted that there is a “notable lack of robust data supporting digital health tools in gastroenterology. Despite hundreds of apps available, very few are supported by well-designed trials.”
“The study demonstrated that chatbot-assisted dietary advice significantly improved bloating symptoms, reduced intake of high-FODMAP foods, and enhanced patients’ dietary knowledge compared to brief dietary counseling alone, especially in those with bothersome symptoms,” said Sinha, who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Patients actively used the chatbot to manage their symptoms, achieving a higher response rate than those in the control arm who received brief counseling on avoiding high-FODMAP food,” he noted.
Sinha said in his practice at Stanford, “in the heart of Silicon Valley,” patients do use digital resources to manage their GI symptoms, including diseases like IBS and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — and he believes this is “increasingly common nationally.”
“However, the need for evidence-based tools is critical and the lack here often prevents many practitioners from regularly recommending them to patients. This study aligns well with clinical practice, and supports the use of this particular app to improve IBS symptoms, particularly when access to dietitians is limited. These results support chatbot-assisted dietary management as a feasible, effective, and scalable approach to patient care,” Sinha told GI & Hepatology News.
The study received no commercial funding. Somvanapanich and Sinha had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM DDW 2025
Blood-Based Test May Predict Crohn’s Disease 2 Years Before Onset
SAN DIEGO — Crohn’s disease (CD) has become more common in the United States, and an estimated 1 million Americans have the condition. Still, much is unknown about how to evaluate the individual risk for the disease.
“It’s pretty much accepted that Crohn’s disease does not begin at diagnosis,” said Ryan Ungaro, MD, associate professor of medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, speaking at Digestive Disease Week (DDW)® 2025.
Although individual blood markers have been associated with the future risk for CD, what’s needed, he said, is to understand which combination of biomarkers are most predictive.
Now, .
It’s an early version that will likely be further improved and needs additional validation, Ungaro told GI & Hepatology News.
“Once we can accurately identify individuals at risk for developing Crohn’s disease, we can then imagine a number of potential interventions,” Ungaro said.
Approaches would vary depending on how far away the onset is estimated to be. For people who likely wouldn’t develop disease for many years, one intervention might be close monitoring to enable diagnosis in the earliest stages, when treatment works best, he said. Someone at a high risk of developing CD in the next 2 or 3 years, on the other hand, might be offered a pharmaceutical intervention.
Developing and Testing the Risk Score
To develop the risk score, Ungaro and colleagues analyzed data of 200 patients with CD and 100 healthy control participants from PREDICTS, a nested case-controlled study of active US military service members. The study is within the larger Department of Defense Serum Repository, which began in 1985 and has more than 62.5 million samples, all stored at −30 °C.
The researchers collected serum samples at four timepoints up to 6 or more years before the diagnosis. They assayed antimicrobial antibodies using the Prometheus Laboratories platform, proteomic markers using the Olink inflammation panel, and anti–granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor autoantibodies using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Participants (median age, 33 years for both groups) were randomly divided into equally sized training and testing sets. In both the group, 83% of patients were White and about 90% were men.
Time-varying trajectories of marker abundance were estimated for each biomarker. Then, logistic regression modeled disease status as a function of each marker for different timepoints and multivariate modeling was performed via logistic LASSO regression.
A risk score to predict CD onset within 2 years was developed. Prediction models were fit on the testing set and predictive performance evaluated using receiver operating characteristic curves and area under the curve (AUC).
Blood proteins and antibodies have differing associations with CD depending on the time before diagnosis, the researchers found.
The integrative model to predict CD onset within 2 years incorporated 10 biomarkers associated significantly with CD onset.
The AUC for the model was 0.87 (considered good, with 1 indicating perfect discrimination). It produced a specificity of 99% and a positive predictive value of 84%.
The researchers stratified the model scores into quartiles and found the CD incidence within 2 years increased from 2% in the first quartile to 57.7% in the fourth. The relative risk of developing CD in the top quartile individuals vs lower quartile individuals was 10.4.
The serologic and proteomic markers show dynamic changes years before the diagnosis, Ungaro said.
A Strong Start
The research represents “an ambitious and exciting frontier for the future of IBD [inflammatory bowel disease] care,” said Victor G. Chedid, MD, MS, consultant and assistant professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, who reviewed the findings but was not involved in the study.
Currently, physicians treat IBD once it manifests, and it’s difficult to predict who will get CD, he said.
The integrative model’s AUC of 0.87 is impressive, and its specificity and positive predictive value levels show it is highly accurate in predicting the onset of CD within 2 years, Chedid added.
Further validation in larger and more diverse population is needed, Chedid said, but he sees the potential for the model to be practical in clinical practice.
“Additionally, the use of blood-based biomarkers makes the model relatively noninvasive and easy to implement in a clinical setting,” he said.
Now, the research goal is to understand the best biomarkers for characterizing the different preclinical phases of CD and to test different interventions in prevention trials, Ungaro told GI & Hepatology News.
A few trials are planned or ongoing, he noted. The trial PIONIR trial will look at the impact of a specific diet on the risk of developing CD, and the INTERCEPT trial aims to develop a blood-based risk score that can identify individuals with a high risk of developing CD within 5 years after initial evaluation.
Ungaro reported being on the advisory board of and/or receiving speaker or consulting fees from AbbVie, Bristol Myer Squibb, Celltrion, ECM Therapeutics, Genentech, Jansen, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Roivant, Sanofi, and Takeda. Chedid reported having no relevant disclosures.
The PROMISE Consortium is funded by the Helmsley Charitable Trust.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — Crohn’s disease (CD) has become more common in the United States, and an estimated 1 million Americans have the condition. Still, much is unknown about how to evaluate the individual risk for the disease.
“It’s pretty much accepted that Crohn’s disease does not begin at diagnosis,” said Ryan Ungaro, MD, associate professor of medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, speaking at Digestive Disease Week (DDW)® 2025.
Although individual blood markers have been associated with the future risk for CD, what’s needed, he said, is to understand which combination of biomarkers are most predictive.
Now, .
It’s an early version that will likely be further improved and needs additional validation, Ungaro told GI & Hepatology News.
“Once we can accurately identify individuals at risk for developing Crohn’s disease, we can then imagine a number of potential interventions,” Ungaro said.
Approaches would vary depending on how far away the onset is estimated to be. For people who likely wouldn’t develop disease for many years, one intervention might be close monitoring to enable diagnosis in the earliest stages, when treatment works best, he said. Someone at a high risk of developing CD in the next 2 or 3 years, on the other hand, might be offered a pharmaceutical intervention.
Developing and Testing the Risk Score
To develop the risk score, Ungaro and colleagues analyzed data of 200 patients with CD and 100 healthy control participants from PREDICTS, a nested case-controlled study of active US military service members. The study is within the larger Department of Defense Serum Repository, which began in 1985 and has more than 62.5 million samples, all stored at −30 °C.
The researchers collected serum samples at four timepoints up to 6 or more years before the diagnosis. They assayed antimicrobial antibodies using the Prometheus Laboratories platform, proteomic markers using the Olink inflammation panel, and anti–granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor autoantibodies using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Participants (median age, 33 years for both groups) were randomly divided into equally sized training and testing sets. In both the group, 83% of patients were White and about 90% were men.
Time-varying trajectories of marker abundance were estimated for each biomarker. Then, logistic regression modeled disease status as a function of each marker for different timepoints and multivariate modeling was performed via logistic LASSO regression.
A risk score to predict CD onset within 2 years was developed. Prediction models were fit on the testing set and predictive performance evaluated using receiver operating characteristic curves and area under the curve (AUC).
Blood proteins and antibodies have differing associations with CD depending on the time before diagnosis, the researchers found.
The integrative model to predict CD onset within 2 years incorporated 10 biomarkers associated significantly with CD onset.
The AUC for the model was 0.87 (considered good, with 1 indicating perfect discrimination). It produced a specificity of 99% and a positive predictive value of 84%.
The researchers stratified the model scores into quartiles and found the CD incidence within 2 years increased from 2% in the first quartile to 57.7% in the fourth. The relative risk of developing CD in the top quartile individuals vs lower quartile individuals was 10.4.
The serologic and proteomic markers show dynamic changes years before the diagnosis, Ungaro said.
A Strong Start
The research represents “an ambitious and exciting frontier for the future of IBD [inflammatory bowel disease] care,” said Victor G. Chedid, MD, MS, consultant and assistant professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, who reviewed the findings but was not involved in the study.
Currently, physicians treat IBD once it manifests, and it’s difficult to predict who will get CD, he said.
The integrative model’s AUC of 0.87 is impressive, and its specificity and positive predictive value levels show it is highly accurate in predicting the onset of CD within 2 years, Chedid added.
Further validation in larger and more diverse population is needed, Chedid said, but he sees the potential for the model to be practical in clinical practice.
“Additionally, the use of blood-based biomarkers makes the model relatively noninvasive and easy to implement in a clinical setting,” he said.
Now, the research goal is to understand the best biomarkers for characterizing the different preclinical phases of CD and to test different interventions in prevention trials, Ungaro told GI & Hepatology News.
A few trials are planned or ongoing, he noted. The trial PIONIR trial will look at the impact of a specific diet on the risk of developing CD, and the INTERCEPT trial aims to develop a blood-based risk score that can identify individuals with a high risk of developing CD within 5 years after initial evaluation.
Ungaro reported being on the advisory board of and/or receiving speaker or consulting fees from AbbVie, Bristol Myer Squibb, Celltrion, ECM Therapeutics, Genentech, Jansen, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Roivant, Sanofi, and Takeda. Chedid reported having no relevant disclosures.
The PROMISE Consortium is funded by the Helmsley Charitable Trust.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — Crohn’s disease (CD) has become more common in the United States, and an estimated 1 million Americans have the condition. Still, much is unknown about how to evaluate the individual risk for the disease.
“It’s pretty much accepted that Crohn’s disease does not begin at diagnosis,” said Ryan Ungaro, MD, associate professor of medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, speaking at Digestive Disease Week (DDW)® 2025.
Although individual blood markers have been associated with the future risk for CD, what’s needed, he said, is to understand which combination of biomarkers are most predictive.
Now, .
It’s an early version that will likely be further improved and needs additional validation, Ungaro told GI & Hepatology News.
“Once we can accurately identify individuals at risk for developing Crohn’s disease, we can then imagine a number of potential interventions,” Ungaro said.
Approaches would vary depending on how far away the onset is estimated to be. For people who likely wouldn’t develop disease for many years, one intervention might be close monitoring to enable diagnosis in the earliest stages, when treatment works best, he said. Someone at a high risk of developing CD in the next 2 or 3 years, on the other hand, might be offered a pharmaceutical intervention.
Developing and Testing the Risk Score
To develop the risk score, Ungaro and colleagues analyzed data of 200 patients with CD and 100 healthy control participants from PREDICTS, a nested case-controlled study of active US military service members. The study is within the larger Department of Defense Serum Repository, which began in 1985 and has more than 62.5 million samples, all stored at −30 °C.
The researchers collected serum samples at four timepoints up to 6 or more years before the diagnosis. They assayed antimicrobial antibodies using the Prometheus Laboratories platform, proteomic markers using the Olink inflammation panel, and anti–granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor autoantibodies using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Participants (median age, 33 years for both groups) were randomly divided into equally sized training and testing sets. In both the group, 83% of patients were White and about 90% were men.
Time-varying trajectories of marker abundance were estimated for each biomarker. Then, logistic regression modeled disease status as a function of each marker for different timepoints and multivariate modeling was performed via logistic LASSO regression.
A risk score to predict CD onset within 2 years was developed. Prediction models were fit on the testing set and predictive performance evaluated using receiver operating characteristic curves and area under the curve (AUC).
Blood proteins and antibodies have differing associations with CD depending on the time before diagnosis, the researchers found.
The integrative model to predict CD onset within 2 years incorporated 10 biomarkers associated significantly with CD onset.
The AUC for the model was 0.87 (considered good, with 1 indicating perfect discrimination). It produced a specificity of 99% and a positive predictive value of 84%.
The researchers stratified the model scores into quartiles and found the CD incidence within 2 years increased from 2% in the first quartile to 57.7% in the fourth. The relative risk of developing CD in the top quartile individuals vs lower quartile individuals was 10.4.
The serologic and proteomic markers show dynamic changes years before the diagnosis, Ungaro said.
A Strong Start
The research represents “an ambitious and exciting frontier for the future of IBD [inflammatory bowel disease] care,” said Victor G. Chedid, MD, MS, consultant and assistant professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, who reviewed the findings but was not involved in the study.
Currently, physicians treat IBD once it manifests, and it’s difficult to predict who will get CD, he said.
The integrative model’s AUC of 0.87 is impressive, and its specificity and positive predictive value levels show it is highly accurate in predicting the onset of CD within 2 years, Chedid added.
Further validation in larger and more diverse population is needed, Chedid said, but he sees the potential for the model to be practical in clinical practice.
“Additionally, the use of blood-based biomarkers makes the model relatively noninvasive and easy to implement in a clinical setting,” he said.
Now, the research goal is to understand the best biomarkers for characterizing the different preclinical phases of CD and to test different interventions in prevention trials, Ungaro told GI & Hepatology News.
A few trials are planned or ongoing, he noted. The trial PIONIR trial will look at the impact of a specific diet on the risk of developing CD, and the INTERCEPT trial aims to develop a blood-based risk score that can identify individuals with a high risk of developing CD within 5 years after initial evaluation.
Ungaro reported being on the advisory board of and/or receiving speaker or consulting fees from AbbVie, Bristol Myer Squibb, Celltrion, ECM Therapeutics, Genentech, Jansen, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Roivant, Sanofi, and Takeda. Chedid reported having no relevant disclosures.
The PROMISE Consortium is funded by the Helmsley Charitable Trust.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM DDW 2025
Winning Strategies to Retain Private Practice Gastroenterologists
SAN DIEGO — With the recently updated recommendations by the US Preventive Services Task Force lowering the age for colorectal cancer screening to 45 instead of 50, an additional 19 million patients now require screening, Asma Khapra, MD, AGAF, a gastroenterologist at Gastro Health in Fairfax, Virginia, told attendees at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
That change, coupled with the expected shortage of gastroenterologists, means one thing: The current workforce can’t meet patient demand, she said. , Khapra added.
The private practice model is already declining, she said. The fraction of US gastroenterologists in “fully independent” private practice was about 30% in 2019, Khapra noted. Then, “COVID really changed the landscape even more.” By 2022, “that number has shrunk to 13%.” Meanwhile, 67% are employed gastroenterologists (not in private practice), 7% work in large group practices, and 13% are private equity (PE) backed.
That makes effective retention strategies crucial for private practices, Khapra said. She first addressed the common attractions of private practices, then the challenges, and finally the winning strategies to retain and keep a viable private practice gastroenterology workforce.
The Attractions of Private Practice
The reasons for choosing private practice are many, Khapra said, including:
- Autonomy,
- Flexibility,
- Competitive compensation,
- Ownership mindset,
- Partnership paths, and
- Work-life balance including involvement in community and culture.
On the other hand, private practices have unique challenges, including:
- Administrative burdens such as EHR documentation, paperwork, prior authorizations, and staffing issues,
- Financial pressures, including competition with the employment packages offered by hospitals, as reimbursements continue to drop and staffing costs increase,
- Burnout,
- Variety of buy-ins and partnership tracks,
- Limited career development, and
- The strains of aging and endoscopy. “We used to joke in our practice that at any given time, three staff members are in physical therapy due to injuries and disabilities.”
Employing the Iceberg Model
One strategy, Khapra said, is to follow Edward T. Hall’s Iceberg Model of Culture , which focuses on the importance of both visible and invisible elements.
“The key to retention in private practice is to develop a value system where everyone is treated well and respected and compensated fairly,” she said. “That doesn’t mean you split the pie [equally].”
“Visible” elements of the model include the physical environment, policies and practices, symbols and behaviors, she said. While under the surface (“invisible” elements) are shared values, perceptions and attitudes, leadership style, conflict resolution, decision making and unwritten rules.
The key, she said, is to provide physicians an actual voice in decision making and to avoid favouritism, thus avoiding comments such as “Why do the same two people always get the prime scoping blocks?”
Financial transparency is also important, Khapra said. And people want flexibility without it being called special treatment. She provided several practical suggestions to accomplish the invisible Iceberg goals.
For instance, she suggested paying for activities outside the practice that physicians do, such as serving on committees. If the practice can’t afford that, she suggested asking the affiliated hospitals to do so, noting that such an initiative can often build community support.
Paying more attention to early associates than is typical can also benefit the practice, Khapra said. “So much effort is made to recruit them, and then once there, we’re on to the next [recruits].” Instead, she suggested, “pay attention to their needs.”
Providing support to physicians who are injured is also crucial and can foster a community culture, she said. For example, one Gastro Health physician was out for 4 weeks due to complications from surgery. “Everyone jumped in” to help fill the injured physician’s shifts, she said, reassuring the physician that the money would be figured out later. “That’s the culture you want to instill.”
To prevent burnout, another key to retaining physicians, “you have to provide support staff.” And offering good benefits, including parental and maternal leave and disability benefits, is also crucial, Khapra said. Consider practices such as having social dinners, another way to build a sense of community.
Finally, bring in national and local gastroenterologist organizations for discussions, including advocating for fair reimbursement for private practice. Consider working with the Digestive Health Physicians Alliance, which describes itself as the voice of independent gastroenterology, she suggested.
More Perspectives
Jami Kinnucan, MD, AGAF, a gastroenterologist and associate professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville , Florida, spoke about optimizing recruitment of young gastroenterologists and provided perspective on Khapra’s talk.
“I think there’s a lot of overlap” with her topic and retaining private practice gastroenterologists, she said in an interview with GI & Hepatology News. Most important, she said, is having an efficient system in which the administrative flow is left to digital tools or other staff, not physicians. “That will also help to reduce burnout,” she said, and allow physicians to do what they most want to do, which is to focus on providing care to patients.
“People want to feel valued for their work,” she agreed. “People want opportunity for career development, opportunities for growth.”
As gastroenterologists age, flexibility is important, as it in in general for all physicians, Kinnucan said. She suggested schedule flexibility as one way. For instance, “if I tell 10 providers, ‘I need you to see 100 patients this week, but you can do it however you want,’ that promotes flexibility. They might want to see all of them on Monday and Tuesday, for instance. If you give people choice and autonomy, they are more likely to feel like they are part of the decision.”
How do you build a high-functioning team? “You do it by letting them operate autonomously,” and “you let people do the things they are really excited about.” And always, as Khapra said, focus on the invisible elements that are so crucial.
Khapra and Kinnucan had no relevant disclosures. Khapra received no funding for her presentation.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — With the recently updated recommendations by the US Preventive Services Task Force lowering the age for colorectal cancer screening to 45 instead of 50, an additional 19 million patients now require screening, Asma Khapra, MD, AGAF, a gastroenterologist at Gastro Health in Fairfax, Virginia, told attendees at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
That change, coupled with the expected shortage of gastroenterologists, means one thing: The current workforce can’t meet patient demand, she said. , Khapra added.
The private practice model is already declining, she said. The fraction of US gastroenterologists in “fully independent” private practice was about 30% in 2019, Khapra noted. Then, “COVID really changed the landscape even more.” By 2022, “that number has shrunk to 13%.” Meanwhile, 67% are employed gastroenterologists (not in private practice), 7% work in large group practices, and 13% are private equity (PE) backed.
That makes effective retention strategies crucial for private practices, Khapra said. She first addressed the common attractions of private practices, then the challenges, and finally the winning strategies to retain and keep a viable private practice gastroenterology workforce.
The Attractions of Private Practice
The reasons for choosing private practice are many, Khapra said, including:
- Autonomy,
- Flexibility,
- Competitive compensation,
- Ownership mindset,
- Partnership paths, and
- Work-life balance including involvement in community and culture.
On the other hand, private practices have unique challenges, including:
- Administrative burdens such as EHR documentation, paperwork, prior authorizations, and staffing issues,
- Financial pressures, including competition with the employment packages offered by hospitals, as reimbursements continue to drop and staffing costs increase,
- Burnout,
- Variety of buy-ins and partnership tracks,
- Limited career development, and
- The strains of aging and endoscopy. “We used to joke in our practice that at any given time, three staff members are in physical therapy due to injuries and disabilities.”
Employing the Iceberg Model
One strategy, Khapra said, is to follow Edward T. Hall’s Iceberg Model of Culture , which focuses on the importance of both visible and invisible elements.
“The key to retention in private practice is to develop a value system where everyone is treated well and respected and compensated fairly,” she said. “That doesn’t mean you split the pie [equally].”
“Visible” elements of the model include the physical environment, policies and practices, symbols and behaviors, she said. While under the surface (“invisible” elements) are shared values, perceptions and attitudes, leadership style, conflict resolution, decision making and unwritten rules.
The key, she said, is to provide physicians an actual voice in decision making and to avoid favouritism, thus avoiding comments such as “Why do the same two people always get the prime scoping blocks?”
Financial transparency is also important, Khapra said. And people want flexibility without it being called special treatment. She provided several practical suggestions to accomplish the invisible Iceberg goals.
For instance, she suggested paying for activities outside the practice that physicians do, such as serving on committees. If the practice can’t afford that, she suggested asking the affiliated hospitals to do so, noting that such an initiative can often build community support.
Paying more attention to early associates than is typical can also benefit the practice, Khapra said. “So much effort is made to recruit them, and then once there, we’re on to the next [recruits].” Instead, she suggested, “pay attention to their needs.”
Providing support to physicians who are injured is also crucial and can foster a community culture, she said. For example, one Gastro Health physician was out for 4 weeks due to complications from surgery. “Everyone jumped in” to help fill the injured physician’s shifts, she said, reassuring the physician that the money would be figured out later. “That’s the culture you want to instill.”
To prevent burnout, another key to retaining physicians, “you have to provide support staff.” And offering good benefits, including parental and maternal leave and disability benefits, is also crucial, Khapra said. Consider practices such as having social dinners, another way to build a sense of community.
Finally, bring in national and local gastroenterologist organizations for discussions, including advocating for fair reimbursement for private practice. Consider working with the Digestive Health Physicians Alliance, which describes itself as the voice of independent gastroenterology, she suggested.
More Perspectives
Jami Kinnucan, MD, AGAF, a gastroenterologist and associate professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville , Florida, spoke about optimizing recruitment of young gastroenterologists and provided perspective on Khapra’s talk.
“I think there’s a lot of overlap” with her topic and retaining private practice gastroenterologists, she said in an interview with GI & Hepatology News. Most important, she said, is having an efficient system in which the administrative flow is left to digital tools or other staff, not physicians. “That will also help to reduce burnout,” she said, and allow physicians to do what they most want to do, which is to focus on providing care to patients.
“People want to feel valued for their work,” she agreed. “People want opportunity for career development, opportunities for growth.”
As gastroenterologists age, flexibility is important, as it in in general for all physicians, Kinnucan said. She suggested schedule flexibility as one way. For instance, “if I tell 10 providers, ‘I need you to see 100 patients this week, but you can do it however you want,’ that promotes flexibility. They might want to see all of them on Monday and Tuesday, for instance. If you give people choice and autonomy, they are more likely to feel like they are part of the decision.”
How do you build a high-functioning team? “You do it by letting them operate autonomously,” and “you let people do the things they are really excited about.” And always, as Khapra said, focus on the invisible elements that are so crucial.
Khapra and Kinnucan had no relevant disclosures. Khapra received no funding for her presentation.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — With the recently updated recommendations by the US Preventive Services Task Force lowering the age for colorectal cancer screening to 45 instead of 50, an additional 19 million patients now require screening, Asma Khapra, MD, AGAF, a gastroenterologist at Gastro Health in Fairfax, Virginia, told attendees at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
That change, coupled with the expected shortage of gastroenterologists, means one thing: The current workforce can’t meet patient demand, she said. , Khapra added.
The private practice model is already declining, she said. The fraction of US gastroenterologists in “fully independent” private practice was about 30% in 2019, Khapra noted. Then, “COVID really changed the landscape even more.” By 2022, “that number has shrunk to 13%.” Meanwhile, 67% are employed gastroenterologists (not in private practice), 7% work in large group practices, and 13% are private equity (PE) backed.
That makes effective retention strategies crucial for private practices, Khapra said. She first addressed the common attractions of private practices, then the challenges, and finally the winning strategies to retain and keep a viable private practice gastroenterology workforce.
The Attractions of Private Practice
The reasons for choosing private practice are many, Khapra said, including:
- Autonomy,
- Flexibility,
- Competitive compensation,
- Ownership mindset,
- Partnership paths, and
- Work-life balance including involvement in community and culture.
On the other hand, private practices have unique challenges, including:
- Administrative burdens such as EHR documentation, paperwork, prior authorizations, and staffing issues,
- Financial pressures, including competition with the employment packages offered by hospitals, as reimbursements continue to drop and staffing costs increase,
- Burnout,
- Variety of buy-ins and partnership tracks,
- Limited career development, and
- The strains of aging and endoscopy. “We used to joke in our practice that at any given time, three staff members are in physical therapy due to injuries and disabilities.”
Employing the Iceberg Model
One strategy, Khapra said, is to follow Edward T. Hall’s Iceberg Model of Culture , which focuses on the importance of both visible and invisible elements.
“The key to retention in private practice is to develop a value system where everyone is treated well and respected and compensated fairly,” she said. “That doesn’t mean you split the pie [equally].”
“Visible” elements of the model include the physical environment, policies and practices, symbols and behaviors, she said. While under the surface (“invisible” elements) are shared values, perceptions and attitudes, leadership style, conflict resolution, decision making and unwritten rules.
The key, she said, is to provide physicians an actual voice in decision making and to avoid favouritism, thus avoiding comments such as “Why do the same two people always get the prime scoping blocks?”
Financial transparency is also important, Khapra said. And people want flexibility without it being called special treatment. She provided several practical suggestions to accomplish the invisible Iceberg goals.
For instance, she suggested paying for activities outside the practice that physicians do, such as serving on committees. If the practice can’t afford that, she suggested asking the affiliated hospitals to do so, noting that such an initiative can often build community support.
Paying more attention to early associates than is typical can also benefit the practice, Khapra said. “So much effort is made to recruit them, and then once there, we’re on to the next [recruits].” Instead, she suggested, “pay attention to their needs.”
Providing support to physicians who are injured is also crucial and can foster a community culture, she said. For example, one Gastro Health physician was out for 4 weeks due to complications from surgery. “Everyone jumped in” to help fill the injured physician’s shifts, she said, reassuring the physician that the money would be figured out later. “That’s the culture you want to instill.”
To prevent burnout, another key to retaining physicians, “you have to provide support staff.” And offering good benefits, including parental and maternal leave and disability benefits, is also crucial, Khapra said. Consider practices such as having social dinners, another way to build a sense of community.
Finally, bring in national and local gastroenterologist organizations for discussions, including advocating for fair reimbursement for private practice. Consider working with the Digestive Health Physicians Alliance, which describes itself as the voice of independent gastroenterology, she suggested.
More Perspectives
Jami Kinnucan, MD, AGAF, a gastroenterologist and associate professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville , Florida, spoke about optimizing recruitment of young gastroenterologists and provided perspective on Khapra’s talk.
“I think there’s a lot of overlap” with her topic and retaining private practice gastroenterologists, she said in an interview with GI & Hepatology News. Most important, she said, is having an efficient system in which the administrative flow is left to digital tools or other staff, not physicians. “That will also help to reduce burnout,” she said, and allow physicians to do what they most want to do, which is to focus on providing care to patients.
“People want to feel valued for their work,” she agreed. “People want opportunity for career development, opportunities for growth.”
As gastroenterologists age, flexibility is important, as it in in general for all physicians, Kinnucan said. She suggested schedule flexibility as one way. For instance, “if I tell 10 providers, ‘I need you to see 100 patients this week, but you can do it however you want,’ that promotes flexibility. They might want to see all of them on Monday and Tuesday, for instance. If you give people choice and autonomy, they are more likely to feel like they are part of the decision.”
How do you build a high-functioning team? “You do it by letting them operate autonomously,” and “you let people do the things they are really excited about.” And always, as Khapra said, focus on the invisible elements that are so crucial.
Khapra and Kinnucan had no relevant disclosures. Khapra received no funding for her presentation.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM DDW 2025
Blood Detection Capsule Helpful in Suspected Upper GI Bleeding
SAN DIEGO — , a study found.
Notably, patients with negative capsule results had shorter hospital stays and lower acuity markers, and in more than one third of cases, an esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) was avoided altogether without any observed adverse events or readmissions, the study team found.
“Our study shows that this novel capsule that detects blood in the upper GI tract (PillSense) was highly sensitive and specific (> 90%) for detecting recent or active upper GI blood, influenced clinical management in 80% of cases and allowed about one third of patients to be safely discharged from the emergency department, with close outpatient follow-up,” Linda Lee, MD, AGAF, medical director of endoscopy, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and associate professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, told GI & Hepatology News.
The study was presented at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
Real-World Insights
EGD is the gold standard for diagnosing suspected upper GI bleeding, but limited access to timely EGD complicates diagnosis and resource allocation.
Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, PillSense (EnteraSense) is an ingestible capsule with a reusable receiver that provides a rapid, noninvasive method for detecting upper GI bleeding. The capsule analyzes light absorption to identify blood and transmits the result within 10 minutes.
Lee and colleagues evaluated the real-world impact of this point-of-care device on clinical triage and resource allocation, while assessing its safety profile.
They analyzed data on 43 patients (mean age 60 years; 72% men) with clinical suspicion of upper GI bleeding in whom the device was used. The most common symptoms were symptomatic anemia (70%), melena (67%), and hematemesis (33%).
Sixteen PillSense studies (37%) were positive for blood detection, and 27 (63%) were negative.
Compared to patients with a positive capsule results, those without blood detected by the capsule had shorter hospital stays (mean, 3.8 vs 13.4 days, P = .02), lower GBS scores (mean, 7.93 vs 12.81; P = .005), and fewer units of blood transfused (mean, 1.19 vs 10.94; P = .01) and were less apt to be hemodynamically unstable (5 vs 8 patients; P = .03).
Capsule results influenced clinical management in 80% of cases, leading to avoidance of EGD in 37% and prioritization of urgent EGD in 18% (all had active bleeding on EGD).
Capsule use improved resource allocation in 51% of cases. This included 12 patients who were discharged from the ED, six who were assigned an inpatient bed early, and four who underwent expedited colonoscopy as upper GI bleeding was ruled out, they noted.
Among the eight patients who did not undergo EGD, there were no readmissions within 30 days and no adverse events. There were no capsule-related adverse events.
“Clinicians should consider using this novel capsule PillSense as another data point in the management of suspected upper GI bleed,” Lee told GI & Hepatology News.
“This could include in helping to triage patients for safe discharge from the ED or to more urgent endoscopy, to differentiate between upper vs lower GI bleed and to manage ICU patients with possible rebleeding,” Lee said.
Important Real-World Evidence
Reached for comment, Shahin Ayazi, MD, esophageal surgeon, Director, Allegheny Health Network Chevalier Jackson Esophageal Research Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, said this study is important for several reasons.
“Prior investigations have established that PillSense possesses a high negative predictive value for detecting upper GI bleeding and have speculated on its utility in triage, decision-making, and potentially avoiding unnecessary endoscopy. This study is important because it substantiates that speculation with clinical data,” Ayazi, who wasn’t involved in the study, told GI & Hepatology News.
“These findings support the capsule’s practical application in patient stratification and clinical workflow, particularly when diagnostic uncertainty is high and endoscopic resources are limited,” Ayazi noted.
In his experience, PillSense is “highly useful as a triage adjunct in the evaluation of suspected upper GI bleeding. It provides direct and objective evidence as to whether blood is currently present in the stomach,” he said.
“In patients whose presentation is ambiguous or whose clinical scores fall into an intermediate risk zone, this binary result can provide clarity that subjective assessment alone may not achieve. This is particularly relevant in settings where the goal is to perform endoscopy within 24 hours, but the volume of consults exceeds procedural capacity,” Ayazi explained.
“In such scenarios, PillSense enables physicians to stratify patients based on objective evidence of active bleeding, helping to prioritize those who require urgent endoscopy and defer or even avoid endoscopic evaluation in those who do not. The result is a more efficient allocation of endoscopic resources without compromising patient safety,” he added.
Ayazi cautioned that the PillSense capsule should not be used as a replacement for clinical evaluation or established risk stratification protocols.
“It is intended for hemodynamically stable patients and has not been validated in cases of active or massive bleeding. Its diagnostic yield depends on the presence of blood in the stomach at the time of capsule transit; intermittent or proximal bleeding that has ceased may not be detected, introducing the potential for false-negative results,” Ayazi told GI & Hepatology News.
“However, in prior studies, the negative predictive value was high, and in the present study, no adverse outcomes were observed in patients who did not undergo endoscopy following a negative PillSense result,” Ayazi noted.
“It must also be understood that PillSense does not localize the source of bleeding or replace endoscopy in patients with a high likelihood of active hemorrhage. It is not designed to detect bleeding from the lower GI tract or distal small bowel. Rather, it serves as an adjunct that can provide immediate clarity when the need for endoscopy is uncertain, and should be interpreted within the broader context of clinical findings, laboratory data, and established risk stratification tools,” he added.
The study had no specific funding. Lee and Ayazi had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — , a study found.
Notably, patients with negative capsule results had shorter hospital stays and lower acuity markers, and in more than one third of cases, an esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) was avoided altogether without any observed adverse events or readmissions, the study team found.
“Our study shows that this novel capsule that detects blood in the upper GI tract (PillSense) was highly sensitive and specific (> 90%) for detecting recent or active upper GI blood, influenced clinical management in 80% of cases and allowed about one third of patients to be safely discharged from the emergency department, with close outpatient follow-up,” Linda Lee, MD, AGAF, medical director of endoscopy, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and associate professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, told GI & Hepatology News.
The study was presented at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
Real-World Insights
EGD is the gold standard for diagnosing suspected upper GI bleeding, but limited access to timely EGD complicates diagnosis and resource allocation.
Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, PillSense (EnteraSense) is an ingestible capsule with a reusable receiver that provides a rapid, noninvasive method for detecting upper GI bleeding. The capsule analyzes light absorption to identify blood and transmits the result within 10 minutes.
Lee and colleagues evaluated the real-world impact of this point-of-care device on clinical triage and resource allocation, while assessing its safety profile.
They analyzed data on 43 patients (mean age 60 years; 72% men) with clinical suspicion of upper GI bleeding in whom the device was used. The most common symptoms were symptomatic anemia (70%), melena (67%), and hematemesis (33%).
Sixteen PillSense studies (37%) were positive for blood detection, and 27 (63%) were negative.
Compared to patients with a positive capsule results, those without blood detected by the capsule had shorter hospital stays (mean, 3.8 vs 13.4 days, P = .02), lower GBS scores (mean, 7.93 vs 12.81; P = .005), and fewer units of blood transfused (mean, 1.19 vs 10.94; P = .01) and were less apt to be hemodynamically unstable (5 vs 8 patients; P = .03).
Capsule results influenced clinical management in 80% of cases, leading to avoidance of EGD in 37% and prioritization of urgent EGD in 18% (all had active bleeding on EGD).
Capsule use improved resource allocation in 51% of cases. This included 12 patients who were discharged from the ED, six who were assigned an inpatient bed early, and four who underwent expedited colonoscopy as upper GI bleeding was ruled out, they noted.
Among the eight patients who did not undergo EGD, there were no readmissions within 30 days and no adverse events. There were no capsule-related adverse events.
“Clinicians should consider using this novel capsule PillSense as another data point in the management of suspected upper GI bleed,” Lee told GI & Hepatology News.
“This could include in helping to triage patients for safe discharge from the ED or to more urgent endoscopy, to differentiate between upper vs lower GI bleed and to manage ICU patients with possible rebleeding,” Lee said.
Important Real-World Evidence
Reached for comment, Shahin Ayazi, MD, esophageal surgeon, Director, Allegheny Health Network Chevalier Jackson Esophageal Research Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, said this study is important for several reasons.
“Prior investigations have established that PillSense possesses a high negative predictive value for detecting upper GI bleeding and have speculated on its utility in triage, decision-making, and potentially avoiding unnecessary endoscopy. This study is important because it substantiates that speculation with clinical data,” Ayazi, who wasn’t involved in the study, told GI & Hepatology News.
“These findings support the capsule’s practical application in patient stratification and clinical workflow, particularly when diagnostic uncertainty is high and endoscopic resources are limited,” Ayazi noted.
In his experience, PillSense is “highly useful as a triage adjunct in the evaluation of suspected upper GI bleeding. It provides direct and objective evidence as to whether blood is currently present in the stomach,” he said.
“In patients whose presentation is ambiguous or whose clinical scores fall into an intermediate risk zone, this binary result can provide clarity that subjective assessment alone may not achieve. This is particularly relevant in settings where the goal is to perform endoscopy within 24 hours, but the volume of consults exceeds procedural capacity,” Ayazi explained.
“In such scenarios, PillSense enables physicians to stratify patients based on objective evidence of active bleeding, helping to prioritize those who require urgent endoscopy and defer or even avoid endoscopic evaluation in those who do not. The result is a more efficient allocation of endoscopic resources without compromising patient safety,” he added.
Ayazi cautioned that the PillSense capsule should not be used as a replacement for clinical evaluation or established risk stratification protocols.
“It is intended for hemodynamically stable patients and has not been validated in cases of active or massive bleeding. Its diagnostic yield depends on the presence of blood in the stomach at the time of capsule transit; intermittent or proximal bleeding that has ceased may not be detected, introducing the potential for false-negative results,” Ayazi told GI & Hepatology News.
“However, in prior studies, the negative predictive value was high, and in the present study, no adverse outcomes were observed in patients who did not undergo endoscopy following a negative PillSense result,” Ayazi noted.
“It must also be understood that PillSense does not localize the source of bleeding or replace endoscopy in patients with a high likelihood of active hemorrhage. It is not designed to detect bleeding from the lower GI tract or distal small bowel. Rather, it serves as an adjunct that can provide immediate clarity when the need for endoscopy is uncertain, and should be interpreted within the broader context of clinical findings, laboratory data, and established risk stratification tools,” he added.
The study had no specific funding. Lee and Ayazi had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — , a study found.
Notably, patients with negative capsule results had shorter hospital stays and lower acuity markers, and in more than one third of cases, an esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) was avoided altogether without any observed adverse events or readmissions, the study team found.
“Our study shows that this novel capsule that detects blood in the upper GI tract (PillSense) was highly sensitive and specific (> 90%) for detecting recent or active upper GI blood, influenced clinical management in 80% of cases and allowed about one third of patients to be safely discharged from the emergency department, with close outpatient follow-up,” Linda Lee, MD, AGAF, medical director of endoscopy, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and associate professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, told GI & Hepatology News.
The study was presented at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.
Real-World Insights
EGD is the gold standard for diagnosing suspected upper GI bleeding, but limited access to timely EGD complicates diagnosis and resource allocation.
Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, PillSense (EnteraSense) is an ingestible capsule with a reusable receiver that provides a rapid, noninvasive method for detecting upper GI bleeding. The capsule analyzes light absorption to identify blood and transmits the result within 10 minutes.
Lee and colleagues evaluated the real-world impact of this point-of-care device on clinical triage and resource allocation, while assessing its safety profile.
They analyzed data on 43 patients (mean age 60 years; 72% men) with clinical suspicion of upper GI bleeding in whom the device was used. The most common symptoms were symptomatic anemia (70%), melena (67%), and hematemesis (33%).
Sixteen PillSense studies (37%) were positive for blood detection, and 27 (63%) were negative.
Compared to patients with a positive capsule results, those without blood detected by the capsule had shorter hospital stays (mean, 3.8 vs 13.4 days, P = .02), lower GBS scores (mean, 7.93 vs 12.81; P = .005), and fewer units of blood transfused (mean, 1.19 vs 10.94; P = .01) and were less apt to be hemodynamically unstable (5 vs 8 patients; P = .03).
Capsule results influenced clinical management in 80% of cases, leading to avoidance of EGD in 37% and prioritization of urgent EGD in 18% (all had active bleeding on EGD).
Capsule use improved resource allocation in 51% of cases. This included 12 patients who were discharged from the ED, six who were assigned an inpatient bed early, and four who underwent expedited colonoscopy as upper GI bleeding was ruled out, they noted.
Among the eight patients who did not undergo EGD, there were no readmissions within 30 days and no adverse events. There were no capsule-related adverse events.
“Clinicians should consider using this novel capsule PillSense as another data point in the management of suspected upper GI bleed,” Lee told GI & Hepatology News.
“This could include in helping to triage patients for safe discharge from the ED or to more urgent endoscopy, to differentiate between upper vs lower GI bleed and to manage ICU patients with possible rebleeding,” Lee said.
Important Real-World Evidence
Reached for comment, Shahin Ayazi, MD, esophageal surgeon, Director, Allegheny Health Network Chevalier Jackson Esophageal Research Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, said this study is important for several reasons.
“Prior investigations have established that PillSense possesses a high negative predictive value for detecting upper GI bleeding and have speculated on its utility in triage, decision-making, and potentially avoiding unnecessary endoscopy. This study is important because it substantiates that speculation with clinical data,” Ayazi, who wasn’t involved in the study, told GI & Hepatology News.
“These findings support the capsule’s practical application in patient stratification and clinical workflow, particularly when diagnostic uncertainty is high and endoscopic resources are limited,” Ayazi noted.
In his experience, PillSense is “highly useful as a triage adjunct in the evaluation of suspected upper GI bleeding. It provides direct and objective evidence as to whether blood is currently present in the stomach,” he said.
“In patients whose presentation is ambiguous or whose clinical scores fall into an intermediate risk zone, this binary result can provide clarity that subjective assessment alone may not achieve. This is particularly relevant in settings where the goal is to perform endoscopy within 24 hours, but the volume of consults exceeds procedural capacity,” Ayazi explained.
“In such scenarios, PillSense enables physicians to stratify patients based on objective evidence of active bleeding, helping to prioritize those who require urgent endoscopy and defer or even avoid endoscopic evaluation in those who do not. The result is a more efficient allocation of endoscopic resources without compromising patient safety,” he added.
Ayazi cautioned that the PillSense capsule should not be used as a replacement for clinical evaluation or established risk stratification protocols.
“It is intended for hemodynamically stable patients and has not been validated in cases of active or massive bleeding. Its diagnostic yield depends on the presence of blood in the stomach at the time of capsule transit; intermittent or proximal bleeding that has ceased may not be detected, introducing the potential for false-negative results,” Ayazi told GI & Hepatology News.
“However, in prior studies, the negative predictive value was high, and in the present study, no adverse outcomes were observed in patients who did not undergo endoscopy following a negative PillSense result,” Ayazi noted.
“It must also be understood that PillSense does not localize the source of bleeding or replace endoscopy in patients with a high likelihood of active hemorrhage. It is not designed to detect bleeding from the lower GI tract or distal small bowel. Rather, it serves as an adjunct that can provide immediate clarity when the need for endoscopy is uncertain, and should be interpreted within the broader context of clinical findings, laboratory data, and established risk stratification tools,” he added.
The study had no specific funding. Lee and Ayazi had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM DDW 2025