PJ Pascricha, NJ Talley. NEJM 2026; 394: 166-176. Functional Dyspepsia
This is a terrific, succinct review of functional dyspepsia.
Key points:
- “The syndrome probably comprises several different and as yet incompletely characterized disorders; local microinflammation driven by an aberrant response by type 2 helper T cells may represent an important subset of cases.”
- “Functional dyspepsia can overlap with other gastrointestinal syndromes, particularly irritable bowel syndrome and gastroesophageal reflux disorder, and persons with such overlap have more severe symptoms.”
- “There is no approved drug therapy; treatment is empirical and directed at symptoms, consisting of acid suppressants and low-dose tricyclic antidepressants (and other neuromodulators), along with appropriate nutritional and psychological support.”
Discussion points:
- Epidemiology: “Worldwide, functional dyspepsia is present in 7.2% of adults (10.1% in the United States), affects women 1.6 times as often as men, and is more common in persons younger than 40 years of age.”
- Diagnostic workup: Workup depends on clinical judgement. Careful evaluation is needed in the presence of alarm symptoms like GI bleeding, anemia, weight loss, dysphagia, personal/family history of gastrointestinal cancers.
Treatments:
- “Acid-inhibition pharmacotherapy is considered to be first-line treatment in functional dyspepsia. However, the benefits of this approach are modest at best”
- Neuromodulators: “Tricyclic antidepressants are considered first-line therapy in this category…Results of the Functional Dyspepsia Treatment Trial showed significant superiority of low-dose amitriptyline over placebo in achieving prespecified “adequate relief” for the last 5 weeks of the 10-week trial (53% with amitriptyline vs. 40% with placebo, P=0.05). The effect appeared to be greatest in participants with epigastric pain (relative risk, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.59). In contrast, the response obtained with escitalopram (a selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitor) did not differ from that obtained with placebo.39 The benefit of amitriptyline was independent of changes in depression or anxiety scores…Mirtazapine (an atypical tetracyclic antidepressant that also antagonizes histamine H1 receptors and serotonin 5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT] type 3 receptors) also has shown efficacy in functional dyspepsia and may be best suited for patients with prominent nausea and clinically significant weight loss.41“
- Psychology: “Recognition and treatment of uncontrolled anxiety and depression are important in all cases. In refractory functional dyspepsia, it is also important to consider psychological therapies as an adjunct for helping patients cope with their symptoms and perhaps attenuate the severity of symptoms. Studies support the use of cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction, and hypnotherapy in functional dyspepsia, and benefits may last up to 12 months.42…the evidence from these trials is considered to be very low.”
- Diet: “Dietary advice has not been shown to be effective in studies.”The effectiveness of simple dietary advice (i.e., small low-fat meals and avoidance of carbonated drinks to limit gastric distention), although seemingly rational, has not been borne out in a randomized trial.33 Low-FODMAP (fructans, fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols) diets have not been shown to reduce symptoms any more than traditional dietary advice.34…” IgE-mediated (classical) food allergy is generally not mistaken for functional dyspepsia, and screening for IgG-mediated reactivity to food antigens is not recommended.25“
- Immune-Modulating Treatment: “A randomized, controlled trial of montelukast, a cysteinyl leukotriene antagonist, in children with duodenal eosinophilia and dyspeptic symptoms showed a significant effect in reducing pain as compared with placebo (62% vs. 32%, P<0.02), and the effect appeared to be even greater (84%) in patients with more than 20 eosinophils per high-powered field.43“
My take (borrowed from the authors) “Given the limited efficacy of drugs that are recommended under national and international guidelines…, the consideration of therapies for which evidence is insufficient may be reasonable in refractory cases.”
Related blog posts:
- Dr. Katja Karrento: Chronic Nausea — Evidence of a Complex Syndrome
- How PPIs Improve Functional Dyspepsia
- Gut-Brain Modulators for Functional GI Disorders: Irritable Bowel, Dyspepsia, Functional Heartburn, and Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome
- Algorithm for “Cursed” Dyspepsia (2018)
- Are Gastroparesis and Functional Dyspepsia Part of the Same Problem?
- Pregabalin Helpful for Functional Dyspepsia in Small Study
- Mirtazapine for Functional Dyspepsia
- A 6-Year Study of Amitriptyline, Escitalopram, and Functional Dyspepsia

















