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Gastro-Oesophageal Reflux Disease (GORD)

NICE CKS Dyspepsia – proven GORD. Last revised: Jul 2023.

NICE Clinical guideline [CG184] Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease and dyspepsia in adults: investigation and management. Last updated: Oct 2019.

Background information added accordingly. Minor changes and enhancements are made to the diagnosis and management section.

Date: 23/11/25

Background Information

Definition

GORD is defined as the reflux of gastric contents (esp. acid, bile and pepsin) back into the oesophagus, causing symptoms of heartburn and acid regurgitation

Aetiology

Organic causes of GORD:

  • Upper GI structural disorders
    • LOS dysfunction
    • Hiatus hernia
    • Oesophageal strictures
    • Oesophageal / gastric cancer
  • Oesophageal motility disorders (e.g. achalasia) (see the Oesophageal Motility Disorders article)

 

Risk factors of GORD can be categorised based on the underlying mechanisms:

↓ Tone of LOS
  • Smoking
  • Alcohol
  • Certain foods (e.g. caffeine, chocolate)
  • Drugs (e.g. anticholinergics, calcium channel blockers, nitrates)
  • Pregnancy (from hormonal changes)
↑ Intra-gastric pressure
  • Pregnancy
  • Obesity
  • Ascites
  • Chronic coughing / straining (e.g. COPD, constipation)
Delayed gastric emptying
  • Fatty food
  • Autonomic gastroparesis (e.g. diabetes, Parkinson’s disease)
  • Drugs (e.g. metoclopramide, opioids, anticholinergic drugs)

Note that H. pylori infection is NOT a risk factor for GORD. In fact, it reduces the risk of developing GORD. [Ref]

Diagnosis

Clinical Features

Typical presentation:

  • Cardinal symptoms of recurrent heartburn (burning, retrosternal chest pain) + regurgitation
  • Symptoms are often worse after:
    • Lying down (esp. going into bed soon after dinner) (patients may report sleeping on multiple pillows to improve symptoms)
    • Eating certain foods / beverage (e.g. alcohol, coffee, fatty meal, chocolate)

 

Other features:

  • Chronic cough
  • Hoarseness
  • Laryngitis, pharyngitis
  • Dental erosions
  • Belching
  • Dysphagia, odynophagia
  • Respiratory conditions
    • Laryngitis, pharyngitis
    • Asthma exacerbation
    • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

Red Flags for Upper GI Malignancy

Offer urgent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy if:

  • Dysphagia alone, or
  • ≥55 y/o with weight loss and any of the following:
    • Upper abdominal pain
    • Reflux
    • Dyspepsia

Other less commonly examined red flags:

  • Consider a suspected cancer pathway referral for people with an upper abdominal mass consistent with stomach cancer
  • Consider non-urgent direct access upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in people with haematemesis
  • Consider non-urgent direct access upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in ≥55 y/o with:
    • Treatment-resistant dyspepsia, or
    • Upper abdominal pain with low haemoglobin levels, or
    • Raised platelet count with any of the following:
      • Nausea
      • Vomiting
      • Weight loss
      • Reflux
      • Dyspepsia
      • Upper abdominal pain, or
    • Nausea or vomiting with any of the following:
      • Weight loss
      • Reflux
      • Dyspepsia
      • Upper abdominal pain

Investigation and Diagnosis

GORD is primarily a clinical diagnosis

 

Only offer upper GI endoscopy if there are red flag symptom(s) (see above) or refractory symptoms. There are 2 possible endoscopic diagnoses:

  • Oesophagitis: presence of oesophageal inflammation and mucosal erosions
  • Endoscopy-negative reflux disease (non-erosive reflux disease): normal endoscopic appearance but the person has typical GORD features

 

Further investigations (NOT routinely performed, mainly for endoscopy-negative reflux disease): [Ref]

  • 24-hour oesophageal pH monitoring – gold standard
    • Excessively high acid exposure time on pH monitoring is diagnostic of GORD
  • Barium swallow / meal (to exclude structural disorders or motility disorders)
  • Oesophageal manometry (to exclude oesophageal motility disorder)

Routine H. pylori testing is NOT recommended in those with typical GORD presentation.

Management

Conservative / General Management

For all patients:

Medication review Important drugs to look out for:
  • NSAIDs
  • Oral steroids
  • Bisphosphonates
  • SSRIs
General lifestyle advice
  • Healthy eating
  • Weight reduction
  • Smoking cessation
  • Reduce alcohol consumption
  • Manage any stress or anxiety
Prevent triggers / attacks
  • Avoid known precipitants associated with their dyspepsia (e.g. smoking, alcohol, coffee, chocolate, fatty food, spicy food, tomatoes)
  • Raising the head of the bed
  • Eat smaller meals and eat their evening meal 3–4 hours before going to bed

Primary Care Management

1st line: full-dose PPI for 4 weeks (or 8 weeks if there is severe oesophagitis)

2nd line (for persistent or recurrent symptoms), consider one of  the following based on clinical judgement:

  • Further course of full-dose PPI / switch to an alternative PPIincrease to double dose
  • Adding or switching to a H2-receptor antagonist (e.g. ranitidine, famotidine, nizatidine) at bedtime (esp. if there are nocturnal symptoms)
  • Long-term maintenance treatment with PPI

In the context of proven GORD, do NOT offer H. pylori test and treat. As H. pylori is associated with peptic ulcer disease, not GORD. In fact, it decreases the risk of developing GORD [Ref]

Regarding long-term treatment with PPI, advise:

  • Long-term PPI is not routinely recommended
  • Use the lowest effective dose to control symptoms
  • If possible, step down or stop treatment
  • Consider self-treatment with antacid and/or alginate therapy, although not recommended for long-term or continuous use

Key long-term complications of PPI use:

  • Risk of infections – C. difficile infection, pneumonia
  • Electrolyte deficiencies – hyponatraemiahypomagnesaemia
  • Malabsorption – iron deficiencyrisk of osteoporosis (from impaired calcium absorption)
  • GI effects – rebound acid hypersecretion when stopped suddenly, hypergastrinaemia → fundic gland polyps

Secondary Care Management

Consider laparoscopic fundoplication – the gold standard anti-reflux surgery

  • Fundoplication involves wrapping the gastric fundus around the lower oesophagus to reinforce the LOS, creating a functional barrier to prevent acid reflux

References


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