• Remodeling and Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE)

  • Jan 30 2024
  • Length: 31 mins
  • Podcast

Remodeling and Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE)  By  cover art

Remodeling and Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE)

  • Summary

  • Description: Co-host Ryan Piansky, a graduate student and patient advocate living with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) and eosinophilic asthma, and co-host Holly Knotowicz, a speech-language pathologist living with EoE, who serves on APFED’s Health Sciences Advisory Council, speak with Dr. Amanda Muir, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. In this episode, Ryan and Holly interview Dr. Muir about tissue remodeling and eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE). Dr. Muir describes remodeling and stiffening, its effects, and how it relates to treatment and inflammation.   Listen in for information on remodeling and a pediatric study Dr. Muir is planning. Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is designed to support, not replace the relationship that exists between listeners and their healthcare providers. Opinions, information, and recommendations shared in this podcast are not a substitute for medical advice. Decisions related to medical care should be made with your healthcare provider. Opinions and views of guests and co-hosts are their own.   Key Takeaways: [:48] Co-host Ryan Piansky welcomes co-host Holly Knotowicz. Holly introduces Dr. Amanda Muir, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP). She has a translational lab that investigates esophageal remodeling in the setting of EoE. Holly thanks Dr. Muir for joining us today.   [1:51] Dr. Muir became interested in eosinophilic disorders as a GI Fellow. There were so many patients with eosinophilic esophagitis and eosinophilic gastrointestinal diseases but there weren’t many good therapies and little was known about the long-term results for children. [2:24] Dr. Muir’s first eosinophilic interest was eosinophilic esophagitis. She joined a lab that was looking at how the esophagus changes over time in the setting of inflammation. After being in the lab, training, and learning all the skills and techniques, she was able to launch her career and lab.   [2:46] Dr. Muir started her own EoE clinic at CHOP (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) as part of their Center for Pediatric Eosinophilic Disorders. She sees patients at the clinic, then she can bring questions from the clinic to the lab and talk about them as a group.   [3:28] Dr. Muir explains esophageal remodeling. There is remodeling that happens in the epithelial compartment of the esophagus. Then there’s remodeling that happens underneath the surface in the lamina propria. For the most part, when people talk about remodeling in eosinophilic esophagitis, they refer to the remodeling happening below the surface.   [3:50] There is a burgeoning field dedicated to studying the surface of the esophagus, and Dr. Muir is also very interested in that. For today’s purposes, we are talking about the remodeling that happens under the surface.   [4:03] Eosinophils that get to the esophagus secrete chemicals that excite the cells below the surface to secrete collagen. Collagen is the glue that holds the body together. They’re secreting glue to help the esophagus hold together, and the esophagus gets stiffer and stiffer, over time. That is remodeling. It’s the body trying to heal itself.   [5:04] Are children and adults equally at risk for remodeling? Patients develop a stiffening of the esophagus more, later in life. It is thought that the more years you have this inflammation, the more stiff your esophagus gets. There are patients six to nine years old who already have signs of stiffening.   [5:28] Dr. Calies Menard-Katcher from Colorado published a paper where she described all of the eosinophilic esophagitis patients at her institution who got dilated. Dilation is the process of a balloon stretching your esophagus open when it’s too narrow. She had patients as young as six in her cohort that she described as having EoE strictures.   [5:49] Remodeling happens with younger patients but we’re not as good at finding it.   [6:08] Any type of inflammation in the GI tract can lead to some stiffening. The typical gastrointestinal disease that we think of as remodeling is Crohn’s Disease. An inflammatory process happens in the small bowel or colon that leads to narrowing and stiffness in the intestines. [6:28] Also GERD (reflux) can lead to stricture, over time. It is just much more rare to see a GERD-induced stricture as opposed to EoE.   [7:13] We are not sure, but to some extent, we think of remodeling as not being reversible. Once there is a certain degree of stiffness, the esophagus does not seem to open up without these dilations. If you can control the inflammation, you can halt the stiffening. Maybe there is some degree of reversibility.   [7:44] In the Phase 2 dupilumab trials, investigators found that patients on dupilumab were seen to gain two millimeters in diameter of the esophagus, compared to the patients on placebo. We may be able to prevent some remodeling if we catch it ...
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