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Principles and clinical methods of body surface gastric mapping: Technical review

Journal

NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY
Volume 35, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nmo.14556

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Chronic gastric symptoms are common, but it is difficult to differentiate specific mechanisms. Body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) is a non-invasive method that measures and maps gastric myoelectrical activity. The adoption of BSGM in clinical practice is expanding, and a working group was formed to standardize clinical BSGM methods. The group reviewed the principles, methods, and clinical applications of BSGM, as well as identified knowledge gaps and future research priorities.
Background and PurposeChronic gastric symptoms are common, however differentiating specific contributing mechanisms in individual patients remains challenging. Abnormal gastric motility is present in a significant subgroup, but reliable methods for assessing gastric motor function in clinical practice are lacking. Body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) is a new diagnostic aid, employs multi-electrode arrays to measure and map gastric myoelectrical activity non-invasively in high resolution. Clinical adoption of BSGM is currently expanding following studies demonstrating the ability to achieve specific patient subgrouping, and subsequent regulatory clearances. An international working group was formed in order to standardize clinical BSGM methods, encompassing a technical group developing BSGM methods and a clinical advisory group. The working group performed a technical literature review and synthesis focusing on the rationale, principles, methods, and clinical applications of BSGM, with secondary review by the clinical group. The principles and validation of BSGM were evaluated, including key advances achieved over legacy electrogastrography (EGG). Methods for BSGM were reviewed, including device design considerations, patient preparation, test conduct, and data processing steps. Recent advances in BSGM test metrics and reference intervals are discussed, including four novel metrics, being the 'principal gastric frequency', BMI-adjusted amplitude, Gastric Alimetry Rhythm Index (TM), and fed: fasted amplitude ratio. An additional essential element of BSGM has been the introduction of validated digital tools for standardized symptom profiling, performed simultaneously during testing. Specific phenotypes identifiable by BSGM and the associated symptom profiles were codified with reference to pathophysiology. Finally, knowledge gaps and priority areas for future BSGM research were also identified by the working group.

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