Background: Laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) is a common comorbidity in patients with malignant neoplasms of the laryngopharynx and is considered a co-factor in carcinogenesis. Diagnosing LPR in this population is challenging because methods with the highest sensitivity, such as 24-hour pH monitoring, are invasive, poorly tolerated by patients, and often contraindicated. Meanwhile, user-friendly visual analog scales (VAS) lack sufficient diagnostic sensitivity and specificity, necessitating the search for new methods of LPR diagnosis.
Objective: To evaluate and compare the diagnostic accuracy of salivary pepsin determination and clinical scales (Reflux Symptom Index [RSI]; Reflux Finding Score [RFS]) for diagnosing LPR in patients with malignant neoplasms of the laryngopharynx.
Materials and Methods: A prospective diagnostic accuracy study included 50 patients with histologically verified stage III-IV laryngopharyngeal cancer. All patients underwent assessment using RSI/RFS scales (index tests), salivary pepsin analysis (index test), and 24-hour pH monitoring (reference standard).
Results: LPR was confirmed in 31 (62%) patients. Salivary pepsin evaluation had a sensitivity of 74.2% (95% CI: 55.4%88.1%) and specificity of 78.9% (95% CI: 54.4%–94.0%). These values exceeded the accuracy of the combined RSI/RFS scales (sensitivity 67.7% [95% CI: 48.6%–83.3%]; specificity 68.4% [95% CI: 43.4%–87.4%]).
Conclusions: Salivary pepsin evaluation is a promising, non-invasive diagnostic method for detecting LPR in patients with laryngopharyngeal cancer, demonstrating higher diagnostic accuracy compared to clinical scales. This method requires further validation in larger studies.
Keywords: 24-hour pH monitoring; laryngopharyngeal reflux; pepsin; saliva; laryngopharyngeal cancer.