Management strategies for gastroparesis
Exclude iatrogenic causes (eg, opioids, surgery, glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists) | ||
Diet modification Small-particle diet to improve symptom relief and facilitate gastric emptying | ||
Pharmacologic therapy | ||
Dosage | Side effects | |
Prokinetics | ||
Metoclopramidea | 10 mg 3 times a day, 30 minutes before meals, for a maximum of 3 months, or 70-μL spray 30 minutes before meals and at bedtime for 2–8 weeks | Extrapyramidal symptoms (1%–25%, higher in elderly and young), tardive dyskinesia (around 0.1% per 1,000 patient-years) |
Erythromycin | 250 mg 3 times a day for 1 to 2 weeks | Tachyphylaxis after 4 weeks |
Domperidoneb | 10 mg 3 times a day | QTc interval prolongation (6%) |
Antiemetics | ||
5-HT3 receptor antagonists (granisetron, ondansetron) | Same dosage as that used to manage nausea or emesis, or as needed per patient | QTc interval prolongation, second-degree heart block (< 1%) |
Neurokinin antagonists (aprepitant, tradipitant) | Aprepitant dose tested in clinical trials is 125 mg once daily | Fatigue, constipation (> 10%) |
Neuromodulators | ||
Levosulpiride | Start with minimum effective dose | Sedation, hypotension, dyskinesia |
Buspirone | Start with minimum effective dose | Dizziness, drowsiness |
Mirtazapine | Start with minimum effective dose | Somnolence, xerostomia, weight gain |
Haloperidol | Start with minimum effective dose | Extrapyramidal symptoms |
Nonpharmacologic therapies Gastric electrical stimulation (“gastric pacemaker”), acupuncture | ||
Pyloric interventions | ||
Endoscopic functional luminal imaging probe | Used to evaluate pyloric function and predict treatment outcomes following gastric peroral endoscopic myotomy | |
Intrapyloric injection of botulinum toxin | Not recommended | |
Laparoscopic (Heineke-Mikulicz) pyloroplasty | Safe and enhances gastric emptying with short-term improvement in symptoms | |
Gastric peroral endoscopic myotomy | Improves gastric emptying and is equivalent to laparoscopic pyloroplasty |