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1.
Aim : To compare the results of two short triple-therapy regimens, different only in the antisecretory drugs used, in patients with active duodenal ulcer and Helicobacter pylori infection.
Methods : All patients received a combination of clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. and tinidazole 500 mg b.d. for 1 week, in addition to an antisecretory drug: omeprazole 20 mg (50 patients) or ranitidine 300 mg (50 patients) twice daily for 1 week, followed by a single daily dose for a further 3 weeks. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, with rapid urease test and histological examination of antral and corpus biopsies, was performed prior to the treatment and at least 2 months after the discontinuation of the antisecretory therapy.
Results : Duodenal ulcer healing was documented in all patients at the endoscopic examination after therapy. H. pylori eradication was achieved in 46 of 50 patients (92%, 95% CI=85–99%) in the omeprazole group and in 43 of 50 patients (86%, 95% CI=76–96%) in the ranitidine group; the difference is not significant.
Conclusion : Omeprazole or ranitidine, in combination with clarithromycin and tinidazole, are equally effective in the eradication of H. pylori infection and healing of duodenal ulcers.  相似文献   

2.
Aim: The present study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of 1-week triple therapy regimens for Helicobacter pylori .
Methods: In two consecutive series, 120 patients with proven H. pylori infection and peptic ulcer disease or functional dyspepsia were treated with either omeprazole 20 mg b.d., amoxycillin 1 g b.d. and clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. (OAC; n=60) or with omeprazole 20 mg b.d., amoxycillin 1 g b.d. and metronidazole 400 mg b.d. over 1 week (OAM; n=60). H. pylori infection was assessed by rapid urease test, culture and histology before and 4 weeks after cessation of the eradication therapy.
Results: H. pylori eradication succeeded in 53 out of 60 patients by omeprazole–amoxycillin–clarithromycin (OAC) (88%; 95% CI 77–95%) and in 47 out of 60 patients by omeprazole–amoxycillin–metronidazole (OAM) (78%; 95% CI 66–88%) (P=0.22). Nine patients of each group available for follow-up reported adverse events (15.0 and 15.5%, respectively) without necessity of discontinuation of the study medications. Serious adverse events were not observed.
Conclusions: Simple and convenient 1-week triple therapies consisting of omeprazole, amoxycillin and either clarithromycin or metronidazole are sufficiently effective in eradicating H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

3.
Background : Previous studies have shown that one-week triple therapy consisting of omeprazole, clarithromycin and amoxycillin may cure Helicobacter pylori infection in the vast majority of patients. The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that a triple therapy with pantoprazole, clarithromycin and amoxycillin cures the infection in 80% of duodenal ulcer patients infected with H. pylori .
Methods : In an open two-centre study, 60 duodenal ulcer patients were treated with pantoprazole 40 mg b.d., clarithromycin 500 mg b.d. and amoxycillin 1 g b.d. for 1 week. During the second week patients received pantoprazole 40 mg once in the morning. We assessed H. pylori infection before treatment and 4 weeks after cessation of the study medication by a rapid urease test, histology after Warthin–Starry stain and a 13C-urea breath test.
Results : Sixty patients (42 males, mean age 47.4 years) entered the trial. All patients were infected with H. pylori . One patient was withdrawn from the study because of allergy to penicillin and six patients were protocol violators. H. pylori infection was cured in 47 out of 53 patients who completed the trial according to the protocol (89%; 95% CI: 80–97%) and in 49 of 60 patients included in the trial (82%; 95% CI: 72–92%). Four weeks after the last administration of study drugs, 55 out of 60 ulcers had healed (92%). Twenty-nine patients reported 51 adverse events that were mostly mild to moderate.
Conclusions : One-week triple therapy consisting of pantoprazole, clarithromycin and amoxycillin is a simple and effective approach to the cure of H. pylori infection in patients with duodenal ulcer. In those patients who took the drugs as prescribed the H. pylori cure rate was 89%, with the lower 95% confidence limit being 80%.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: One-week low-dose triple therapy is currently considered the gold standard regimen for treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection. However, the mechanisms involved in the synergy between antibiotics and proton pump inhibitors are controversial. AIMS: To test the hypothesis that acid suppression represents the crucial mechanism by which the antibacterial activity of antibiotics can be enhanced, and to assess the impact of primary resistance on treatment outcome. METHODS: One hundred and twenty patients with H. pylori infection and duodenal ulcer, gastric ulcer or non-ulcer dyspepsia were randomly assigned to a 1 week course of either famotidine 80 mg b.d., clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. and metronidazole 500 mg b.d. (FCM group; n = 60) or omeprazole 20 mg o.d., clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. and metronidazole 500 mg b.d. (OCM group; n = 60). Gastroscopy was performed at baseline and 5 weeks after completion of treatment. H. pylori status was assessed by biopsy urease test, histology and culture. RESULTS: In the intention-to-treat analysis, eradication of H. pylori was achieved in 47 of 60 patients (78%; 95% CI: 66-88%) in the FCM group, compared to 44 of 60 patients (73%; 95% CI: 60-84%) in the OCM group (N.S.). Using per protocol analysis, eradication therapy was successful in 47 of 52 patients (90%; 95% CI: 79-97%) treated with FCM and 44 of 57 patients (77%; 95% CI: 64-87%) treated with OCM (N.S.). Primary metronidazole resistance was present in 27% and primary clarithromycin resistance in 8% of strains. Overall per protocol eradication rates in strains susceptible to both antibiotics and strains with isolated metronidazole resistance were 93% and 84%, respectively. No patient with clarithromycin resistance responded to treatment. CONCLUSIONS: High-dose famotidine and omeprazole, combined with clarithromycin and metronidazole, are equally effective for eradication of H. pylori. In 1-week low-dose triple therapy, metronidazole resistance has no major impact on eradication rates whereas clarithromycin resistance is associated with a poor treatment outcome.  相似文献   

5.
Background : Dual therapy with omeprazole plus amoxycillin or with omeprazole plus clarithromycin has been proposed for eradication of Helicobacter pylori . The main problem is the great variability in the rate of eradication.
Methods : A group of 287 consecutive patients with active peptic ulcers and H. pylori infections were admitted to a prospective, randomized, multicentre study, to be given omeprazole 20 mg b.d. plus either amoxycillin 1 g b.d. or clarithromycin 500 mg t.d.s. for 2 weeks. Cure was defined as the absence of H. pylori infection, 4–6 weeks after completing anti-microbial therapy, assessed by urease activity and histology of antral and body gastric biopsies.
Results : The bacteria were eradicated in 68/143 patients (48%) treated with amoxycillin and omeprazole and 70/144 patients (49%) treated with clarithromycin and omeprazole (intention-to-treat analysis). The ulcers were healed in 118/127 patients (93%) treated with amoxycillin and in 115/123 (94%) of those treated with clarithromycin. Undesirable effects were rare with both treatments.
Conclusions : Combined treatment with omeprazole plus either amoxycillin or clarithromycin produced a high percentage of short-term healing of ulcers and was well tolerated, but is not useful as first-line anti- Helicobacter pylori treatment.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: Eradication of Helicobacter pylori infection prevents duodenal ulcer (DU) relapse, but it remains uncertain whether eradication of H. pylori alone heals duodenal ulceration. AIM: To test the hypothesis that eradication of H. pylori infection is accompanied by healing of duodenal ulcer. METHODS: A total of 115 consecutive patients with endoscopically confirmed H. pylori-infected duodenal ulcer were randomly assigned to one of two groups. Group BTC patients received a 1-week course of colloidal bismuth subcitrate 220 mg b.d., tinidazole 500 mg b.d., clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. Group OBTC patients received omeprazole 20 mg daily for 4 weeks with the BTC regimen during the first week. Endoscopy with antral biopsies and 13C-urea breath test (UBT) were performed before and 4 weeks after completion of the 7-day triple or quadruple therapy. RESULTS: Eight patients dropped out (four in BTC and four in OBTC). Duodenal ulcer healing rates on an intention-to-treat basis in BTC and OBTC were 86% (95% CI: 77-95%) and 90% (95% CI: 82-98%), respectively. The eradication rates of H. pylori on an intention-to-treat basis in BTC and OBTC were 88% (95% CI: 79-96%) and 91% (95% CI: 84-99%), respectively. There were no statistically significant differences in ulcer healing rates and eradication rates between these two groups (P > 0.05). Epigastric pain resolved more rapidly in patients assigned to OBTC compared with those assigned to BTC. Both of the two regimens were well tolerated with only minor side-effects (3% of the 115 patients) and the compliance was good. CONCLUSIONS: BTC is a very effective H. pylori eradication regimen. Almost all duodenal ulcers heal spontaneously after cure of H. pylori infection using a 1-week low-dose bismuth-based triple therapy. Treating duodenal ulcer with simultaneous administration of omeprazole achieves ulcer pain relief more rapidly.  相似文献   

7.
Background: Helicobacter pylori is strongly associated with peptic ulcer: H. pylori eradication markedly decreases the recurrence rate of duodenal and gastric ulcer, but the optimum length of antibiotic therapy in the eradication of H. pylori is still unclear.
Aim: To verify the effectiveness and side-effect profile of an eradicating regimen consisting of omeprazole 20 mg daily for 4 weeks and, during the first week, combination antimicrobial treatment with tinidazole 500 mg b.d. plus clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. in patients with active duodenal and gastric ulcer.
Methods: One hundred and ninety-six duodenal ulcer patients and 27 gastric ulcer patients with H. pylori infection were admitted into an open prospective study. Compliance was assessed by an accurate interview.
Results: Overall, H. pylori was successfully eradicated in 201 of 223 patients (intention-to-treat 90.1%; 95% CI=85–94%): 176 of 196 duodenal ulcer patients became H. pylori- negative (89.8%; CI=85–94%) as well as 25 of 27 gastric ulcer patients (92.6%; CI=76–99%). Compliance was excellent in 221 of 223 (99.1%) patients evaluated as having taken all the medication as prescribed. Sixteen patients (7.2%) developed mild side effects during treatment.
Conclusion: This combination treatment had excellent results with almost absolute compliance and a very low rate of minor side effects.  相似文献   

8.
Background : Multi-drug regimens are generally required to reliably cure H. pylori infection. We previously demonstrated that a 2-week three-times-a-day regimen of amoxycillin and clarithromycin was effective against H. pylori infection.
Objectives : To evaluate the efficacy and side-effects of a 1-week twice-daily dosing schedule for the treatment of H. pylori infection.
Methods : We studied the efficacy of 1-week of therapy with 20 mg of omeprazole, 1 g of amoxycillin and 250 mg of clarithromycin, all twice daily H. pylori status was determined at entry and 4 or more weeks after completing antimicrobial therapy using histology (Genta stain) and culture.
Results : Thirty-one patients with documented peptic ulcer disease and H. pylori infection were treated. The H. pylori infection was cured in 24 (77%, 95% CI= 58–90%) (intention-to-treat). In a per protocol analysis the cure rate was 23 of 29 patients (79%, 95% CI= 60–92%). One patient took only 43% of the study drugs and another withdrew following development of an anaphylactic reaction to study medication. Mild side-effects were reported by 16% including diarrhoea, headache and altered taste. Compliance averaged 95%. Pretreatment clarithromycin resistance averaged 5% and had not been acquired by any strains post-therapy.
Conclusion : This combination of omeprazole, amoxycillin and low-dose clarithromycin resulted in a relatively low cure rate even in patients with clarithromycin-sensitive isolates. Large comparative studies will be needed to define the optimal duration, dose and dosing interval if this combination of drugs is to become competitive.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of omeprazole-based eradication therapies has been determined mostly in populations with low to moderate prevalence of metronidazole resistant Helicobacter pylori, yet resistance is high in many regions. AIM AND METHODS: The H. pylori eradication and duodenal ulcer healing rates after 1 week of either omeprazole 40 mg mane, amoxycillin 500 mg t.d.s. and metronidazole 400 mg t.d.s. (OAM) or omeprazole 20 mg b.d., metronidazole 400 mg b. d. and clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. (OMC) were compared in a randomized trial in Australia and New Zealand. Patients had a further 1 week of omeprazole 20 mg. Outcome was assessed at 6 weeks with stringent criteria (endoscopy, biopsies and 13C-urea breath test). RESULTS: Of 220 subjects randomized, the H. pylori eradication rates (all patients treated/per protocol) were 82%/85% for OMC and 58%/63% for OAM (P= 0.001). Pre-treatment metronidazole resistance was present in 56% and clarithromycin resistance in 6%. The eradication rate for primary metronidazole resistance isolates treated with OMC was 80% (CI: 65-90%) compared with 45% (CI: 29-62%) for OAM, whereas for sensitive organisms, the eradication rates were 94% (CI: 79-99%) and 79% (CI: 62-91%), respectively. Duodenal ulcer healing was 96% for OMC and 87% for OAM. Compliance was excellent and both treatments were well-tolerated. CONCLUSIONS: OMC is a well-tolerated, effective therapy for H. pylori eradication and duodenal ulcer healing in this region despite the high metronidazole resistance rate. OAM is less effective, largely due to the impact of metronidazole resistance.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of Helicobacter pylori eradication treatment and long term acid suppression maintenance in the natural course of duodenal ulcer has not been directly compared. AIM: To compare in a prospective randomized study the effectiveness of H. pylori eradication on the prevention of recurrence of duodenal ulcer with long-term maintenance acid suppression therapy. METHODS: One hundred and fourteen duodenal ulcer patients were randomized to the treatment over a 12-month period. Fifty-seven of them received triple therapy consisting of 1 g sucralfate q.d.s. for 28 days, 300 mg metronidazole q.d.s. for 14 days and 250 mg clarithromycin q.d.s. for 14 days. Another 57 received 20 mg omeprazole q.d.s. for 12 months. An upper endoscopy was performed before treatment, at 6 weeks, and 2, 6 and 12 months after the first endoscopy. Side-effects were self-recorded and clinical follow-ups were arranged for up to 4.25 years. RESULTS: The ulcer healing rate was 90.2% (95% confidence interval (95% CI): 79-97%) in the omeprazole group at 6 weeks as compared to 83.3% (95% CI: 70-93%) in the triple therapy group (P = 0.38). There was a higher success rate of pain control in the omeprazole group. Side-effects were more frequently reported and compliance was poorer in the triple therapy group during the first 4 weeks. During follow-up, more relapses were seen in the omeprazole group (9.8%, 95% CI: 3-21%) than the triple therapy group (4.2%, 95% CI: 1-13%) at 1 year (P = 0.44). All relapses were due to the persistence of H. pylori infection. At the 1 year follow-up, none of the patients who were H. pylori negative had an endoscopic relapse compared to 7 out of 56 patients who remained H. pylori positive (12.5%, 95% CI: 5-24%, P = 0.018). After a mean follow-up of 4.07 years, none of those who remained H. pylori negative had an ulcer relapse while the 11 out of 41 who remained H. pylori positive had an ulcer relapse (26.8%, 95% CI 14-43, P = 0. 0005). CONCLUSIONS: Both regimens were highly effective in healing ulcers. The eradication of H. pylori infection was associated with more side-effects and poor compliance but was more effective than the maintenance therapy in reducing the recurrence of duodenal ulcers. For the prevention of ulcer recurrence, testing of H. pylori status after triple therapy is more important than maintenance therapy.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: While addition of metronidazole to the omeprazole-amoxycillin combination has been shown to be advantageous, the optimal dosage and drug distribution of the antimicrobials has not been sufficiently evaluated. AIM: To investigate the efficacy of two different regimens of omeprazole, amoxycillin and metronidazole for the cure of Helicobacter pylori infection. METHODS: Two hundred and fifty-five patients with H. pylori associated duodenal ulcers were randomly treated with either a 1-week regimen of omeprazole 20 mg b.d., amoxycillin 1000 mg b.d. and metronidazole 800 mg b.d. (OAM b.d.) or a combination of omeprazole 40 mg o.d., amoxycillin 500 mg t.d.s. and metronidazole 400 mg t.d.s. (OAM t.d.s.). All patients subsequently received omeprazole 20 mg o.d. for an additional 3 weeks. H. pylori status was assessed by histology and 13C-UBT prior to treatment and 8 weeks after randomization. Additional biopsies were obtained for H. pylori culture to determine primary and secondary resistance to metronidazole by agar dilution. RESULTS: Two hundred and thirty-seven patients were included in the intention-to-treat analysis and 198 patients in the per protocol analysis. With intention-to-treat analysis, the cure rate was 77% after treatment with OAM b.d. (95% CI, 69%-85%) and 76% after OAM t. d.s. therapy (95% CI, 67%-83%). Ulcer healing (intention-to-treat analysis) was documented in 95% of patients in the OAM b.d. group (n=122) and in 97% of patients in the OAM t.d.s. group (n=115). Adverse events were reported in 26 (20%) and in 18 (14%) patients in the OAM b.d. and OAM t.d.s. groups, respectively. None resulted in discontinuation of treatment. Overall primary resistance of H. pylori against metronidazole was found in 22 of 116 strains (19%). CONCLUSIONS: The combination of omeprazole, amoxycillin and metronidazole achieves about an 80% cure rate of H. pylori infection even in active ulcers. The total daily dose, and the choice of twice or three times daily dosing does not seem critical with this regimen.  相似文献   

12.
Aim : To evaluate and compare two 1-week low-dose triple therapies based on lansoprazole, amoxycillin and a macrolide in eradicating Helicobacter pylori .
Methods : Seventy consecutive patients, suffering from dyspeptic symptoms with H. pylori infection, were randomly allocated to one of two treatment groups: (A) (LAC; n =35) lansoprazole 30 mg once daily, amoxycillin 1000 mg b.d., clarithromycin 250 mg b.d., all for 7 days; and (B) (LAA; n =35) lansoprazole 30 mg once daily and amoxycillin 1000 mg b.d., both for 7 days, plus azithromycin 500 mg once daily for only 3 days. The H. pylori status was evaluated by means of histology and rapid urease test at entry and 8 weeks after treatment.
Results : Three patients did not complete the treatment: one in the LAC group was withdrawn owing to severe side-effects; two patients in the LAA group stopped the treatment prematurely. H. pylori eradication was obtained in 28 of 34 (82%; 95% CI=66–93%) patients in the LAC group and in 20 of 33 (61%; 95% CI=42–77%) patients in the LAA group. The difference is significant ( P <0.029). On intention-to-treat analysis, the rates of eradication were (28 of 35 patients, 80% in the LAC group and 20 of 35 patients, 57% in the LAA group. Side-effects occurred in nine (26%) and six (18%) patients in the LAC and LAA groups, respectively.
Conclusions : Low-dose lansoprazole plus amoxycillin and clarithromycin is more effective than low-dose lansoprazole plus amoxycillin and azithromycin, but it gave a greater incidence of side-effects.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of proton pump inhibitor based triple therapy in patients from South-East Asia, where metronidazole resistance is reportedly high, has not been formally assessed in randomized, multicentre trials. AIM: To compare the eradication rates of Helicobacter pylori, ulcer healing rates and side-effects of three regimens of omeprazole triple therapy in patients with duodenal ulcer from South-East Asia and to study the impact of metronidazole resistance. METHODS: A single blind, randomized parallel group, comparative multicentre study. A total of 246 patients from 15 centres in four South-East Asian countries were randomized to receive OAC (omeprazole 20 mg b.d., amoxycillin 1 g b. d., clarithromycin 500 mg b.d.), OAM (omeprazole 20 mg b.d., amoxycillin 1 g b.d., metronidazole 400 mg b.d.) or OMC (omeprazole 20 mg b.d., metronidazole 400 mg b.d., clarithromycin 500 mg b.d.) for 7 days. After triple therapy, the patients were further randomized to receive either omeprazole or placebo for 7 days. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was performed before treatment and 4 weeks after treatment. Biopsies for culture and for histopathological examination for H. pylori were taken from corpus and antrum before treatment and 4 weeks after treatment. RESULTS: The eradication rates were intention-to-treat/per protocol (95% CI): OAC 87% (79-94%)/94% (89-100%); OAM 80% (70-89%)/91% (83-98%); OMC 85% (77-93%)/94% (88-100%). The difference in eradication rates between the three groups was not statistically significant (P=0.419). Pre-treatment metronidazole resistance, was found in 34% of isolates and was a significant prognostic factor in patients receiving OAM (odds ratio 5.26) but not in patients receiving OAC or OMC. CONCLUSIONS: All three treatment regimens were safe, well tolerated and highly effective for eradication of H. pylori and ulcer healing. Pre-treatment metronidazole resistance reduced the efficacy of OAM but did not affect the efficacy of OMC.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: The aim of our study was to compare two 1-week, low-dose triple therapies for Helicobacter pylori eradication. METHODS: One hundred consecutive patients, suffering from dyspeptic symptoms with H. pylori infection, were randomly allocated to 7 days of treatment with omeprazole 20 mg o.m. plus clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. and either tinidazole 500 mg b.d. (group A: n = 50, 19 with peptic ulcer) or amoxycillin 1000 mg b.d. (group B: n = 50, 20 with peptic ulcer). H. pylori-status was evaluated by means of histology, culture and urease test, at entry and 8 weeks after treatment. RESULTS: Three patients did not complete the treatment. H. pylori eradication was obtained in 35 patients from group A (73%) (95% CI, 55-82%) and in 40 patients from group B (82%) (95% CI, 66-90%). On intention-to-treat analysis, the rates of eradication were similar. Side-effects occurred in seven patients from group A (14.58%) and in four patients from group B (8.33%), but none discontinued therapy because of side-effects. CONCLUSION: Both triple 1-week, low-dose omeprazole therapies gave good eradication rates with infrequent side-effects.  相似文献   

15.
AIM: To evaluate clarithromycin 500 mg t.d.s., tripotassium dicitrato bismuthate 240 mg b.d. and omeprazole 20 mg b.d. for 7 days as a Helicobacter pylori treatment regimen. METHODS: The H. pylori status of dyspeptic patients undergoing endoscopy was assessed by histology, culture and rapid urease testing of biopsies and by 13C-urea breath test. Fifty patients who were H. pylori-positive were treated with the above treatment regimen for 7 days. Those patients with active duodenal ulcers present at endoscopy were given omeprazole 20 mg nocte for a further 21 days. Not less than 28 days after completing treatment, all tests were repeated to reassess H. pylori status. Bacterial sensitivity of H. pylori cultures was determined and patients recorded any side- effects. RESULTS: On an intention-to-treat basis, H. pylori infection was cured in 90% (95% CI: 78-96%) of patients. Taste disturbance was experienced by 35% patients. Compliance was excellent, with 96% patients taking more than 95% of tablets. Metronidazole resistance was 41% but all cultures were sensitive to clarithromycin. CONCLUSIONS: This 7-day treatment achieved a high level of cure of H. pylori infection with relatively minor side-effects. It may have a role to play, particularly where there is a high level of metronidazole resistance.  相似文献   

16.
BACKGROUND: Triple therapy currently forms the cornerstone of the treatment of patients with Helicobacter pylori-positive duodenal ulcer. AIM: To establish whether prolonged antisecretory therapy is necessary in patients with active duodenal ulcer. METHODS: A total of 77 patients with H. pylori-positive duodenal ulcer were included in a prospective, controlled, double-blind study. All patients received a 7-day treatment with omeprazole 20 mg b.d., clarithromycin 500 mg b.d. and amoxicillin 1000 mg b.d. Patients in the omeprazole group underwent an additional 14-day therapy with omeprazole 20 mg; patients in placebo group received placebo. Endoscopy was performed upon inclusion in the study and after 3 and 8 weeks. RESULTS: Seventy-four patients were eligible for a per protocol analysis after 3 weeks, and 65 after 8 weeks. After 3 weeks, the healing rate was 89% in the omeprazole group and 81% in the placebo group (P=0.51). After 8 weeks, the ulcer healed in 97% of the patients in the total group (95% CI: 92.7-100%). H. pylori was eradicated in 88% of patients in the omeprazole group and in 91% in the placebo group (P=1.0). No statistically significant differences between the groups were found in ulcer-related symptoms or in ulcer healing. CONCLUSION: In patients with H. pylori-positive duodenal ulcer, a 7-day triple therapy alone is sufficient to control the disease.  相似文献   

17.
BACKGROUND: Many dual and triple therapy treatment regimens have been proposed for the eradication of Helicobacter pylori. However, assessing the relative efficacy of these regimens is complicated by differences in study design, and few well-controlled comparative studies have been reported. METHODS: This multicentre, randomized, double-blind study involved 530 duodenal ulcer patients, of whom 520 had confirmed H. pylori infection. Patients received 14 days b.d. dual therapy of either ranitidine bismuth citrate (RBC) 400 mg or omeprazole 20 mg, both with clarithromycin 500 mg to eradicate H. pylori, followed by a further 14 days of treatment with RBC 400 mg b. d. or omeprazole 20 mg o.d. to facilitate ulcer healing. H. pylori eradication and ulcer healing were assessed at least 26 days after the end of treatment. Adverse events were recorded throughout the study. RESULTS: H. pylori was eradicated in 90% of patients who received RBC with clarithromycin and in 66% of patients who received omeprazole with clarithromycin (per protocol; P<0.001). intention-to-treat eradication rates were 77% and 60%, respectively (P<0.001). Ulcer healing rates were 97% in the RBC treatment group and 95% in the omeprazole treatment group. Only 3% and 1% of patients in the RBC and omeprazole treatment groups, respectively, were withdrawn due to adverse events. CONCLUSIONS: RBC with clarithromycin is a simple and highly effective dual therapy regimen for the eradication of H. pylori, and is significantly more effective than omeprazole with clarithromycin. Both treatment regimens are well tolerated and effectively heal duodenal ulcers.  相似文献   

18.
Background : Triple therapy with omeprazole, clarithromycin, and tinidazole (OCT) has been found to be highly effective against Helicobacter pylori infection. However, its efficacy as a second line regimen for patients who failed metronidazole-based triple therapy has not been evaluated.
Aim : The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of low-dose, short-term OCT therapy in an Israeli population, and to compare results obtained in previously treated and untreated patients.
Methods : Patients with duodenal or gastric ulcers and chronic antral gastritis with H. pylori infection as assessed by rapid urease test and/or 14C urea breath test (14C-UBT), were studied. All patients received omeprazole 20 mg b.d., clarithromycin 250 mg b.d. and tinidazole 500 mg b.d. for 7 days. Eradication was assessed by 14C-UBT 4 weeks after treatment.
Results : One hundred and fourty-four patients (M/F=81/63) were enrolled (mean age 48.1 years, range 12–78). Eradication of H. pylori was significantly different between patients who were initially treated with this regimen (90/94, 96%) and patients who had previously failed to eradicate H. pylori with standard triple therapy (27/50, 54%). Moreover, the eradication rate was significantly decreased in patients with more than one previous failure (9/22, 41%) compared to that in patients with only one failure (18/29, 62%). No other differences such as age, gastric pathology, ethnic origin, smoking habits, or pre-treatment urease activity were found to influence the eradication rate.
Conclusions : One-week low-dose triple therapy with OCT is highly effective as an initial therapy in eradicating H. pylori infection. The efficacy is significantly lower when given as a second line treatment in patients who have previously failed to eradicate H. pylori with bismuth-based standard triple therapy.  相似文献   

19.
Background : Ranitidine bismuth citrate (RBC) 400 mg when given twice daily (b.d.) for 4 weeks with clarithromycin 250 mg four times daily (q.d.s.) for the first 2 weeks effectively heals duodenal ulcers and eradicates Helicobacter pylori .
Aims : To compare two dosage regimens of clarithromycin, 250 mg q.d.s. and 500 mg b.d., used with ranitidine bismuth citrate (Pylorid) 400 mg b.d., for the eradication of H. pylori and for symptom relief in patients with active duodenal ulcers.
Subjects : 236 patients with active duodenal ulcer and confirmed H. pylori infection.
Methods : In a randomized, double-blind, parallel group, multi-centre study, RBC was given with clarithromycin for 2 weeks followed by 2 weeks treatment with RBC alone to allow for ulcer healing. Ulcer status was assessed by endoscopy at entry. H. pylori status was assessed by CLO Test and 13C-urea breath test (UBT) at entry and UBT alone 4 weeks after the end of treatment. At entry, during the study and at follow-up, ulcer symptoms were recorded on a scale of none, mild, moderate or severe.
Results : 176 patients had an evaluable UBT at least 4 weeks post-treatment. H. pylori eradication rates were 96.2% for the RBC plus clarithromycin b.d. regimen and 91.8% for the RBC plus clarithromycin q.d.s. regimen (observed data). Four weeks post-treatment, 92% of patients receiving RBC b.d. plus clarithromycin q.d.s. and 89% receiving RBC b.d. plus clarithromycin b.d. were considered symptom successes (none or mild symptoms).
Conclusions : RBC 400 mg b.d. plus clarithromycin 500 mg b.d. was as effective as RBC 400 mg b.d. plus clarithromycin 250 mg q.d.s. in eradicating H. pylori and both regimens were well tolerated. The simpler dual therapy in a b.d. regimen might well encourage greater patient compliance.  相似文献   

20.
AIM: This study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of a one-week triple therapy with esomeprazole, clarithromycin and metronidazole for eradication of Helicobacter pylori infection in the absence of antimicrobial resistance. METHODS: Patients testing positive for H. pylori susceptible to metronidazole and clarithromycin (E-test) were randomized to receive a one-week regimen with either esomeprazole 2 x 20 mg or omeprazole 2 x 20 mg in combination with clarithromycin 2 x 250 mg and metronidazole 2 x 400 mg. Follow-up endoscopy with histology and culture and/or rapid urease test was performed 4-8 weeks after the end of treatment. RESULTS: Eighty patients were randomized. Helicobacter pylori infection was cured in 38/39 patients of the esomeprazole group and 31/33 patients of the omeprazole group (per protocol 97.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 86.2-99.9), 93.7% (95% CI, 79.2-99.2), P=0.59); intention-to-treat 90.4% (95% CI: 77.4-97.3), 81.6% (95% CI: 65.7-92.3), respectively. No major side effects occurred. Minor side effects occurred in eight (20%) and six (23%) patients during esomeprazole and omeprazole therapy, respectively. Post-treatment susceptibility testing revealed resistance to both metronidazole and clarithromycin in two of the three patients who failed. CONCLUSION: We conclude that esomeprazole, clarithromycin and metronidazole as one-week triple therapy is effective for eradication of H. pylori in the absence of antimicrobial resistance.  相似文献   

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