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Symptomatic and endoscopic duodenal ulcer relapse rates 12 months following Helicobacter pylori eradication treatment with omeprazole and amoxycillin with or without metronidazole
Author(s) -
BELL G. D.,
BATE C. M.,
AXON A. T. R.,
TILDESLEY G.,
MARTIN J. L.,
TAYLOR M. D.,
RICHARDSON P. D. I.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
alimentary pharmacology and therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.308
H-Index - 177
eISSN - 1365-2036
pISSN - 0269-2813
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2036.1996.36178000.x
Subject(s) - omeprazole , medicine , helicobacter pylori , metronidazole , gastroenterology , amoxicillin , breath test , proton pump inhibitor , antibacterial agent , surgery , antibiotics , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
Aim : To determine the effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication with omeprazole and amoxycillin, with or without metronidazole, on the 12‐month course of duodenal ulcer disease. Methods : In a randomized, double‐blind study, conducted in 19 hospitals, 105 H. pylori positive duodenal ulcer patients were healed and symptom‐free following either omeprazole dual therapy (omeprazole 40 mg o.m.+amoxycillin 500 mg t.d.s., OA, eradication rate 46%, n =52) or omeprazole triple therapy (omeprazole 40 mg o.m.+amoxycillin 500 mg t.d.s.+metronidazole 400 mg t.d.s., OAM, eradication rate 92%, n =53) for 2 weeks, followed by 2 weeks of omeprazole 20 mg o.m. and a 12‐month untreated follow‐up period, after which time all patients were endoscoped. Endoscopic and symptomatic relapse rates, and effect on H. pylori status measured using 13 C‐urea breath test, were determined. Results : During the 12‐month untreated follow‐up period, the life‐table endoscopic relapse rates were 12% (95% CI: 2–22%) and 2% (95% CI: 0–6%) for OA and OAM patients, respectively. By 12 months, life‐table symptomatic relapse rates were 22% (95% CI: 13–37%) and 19% (95% CI: 8–30%) for OA and OAM, respectively. In the 12 months untreated follow‐up period, 2/69 (3%, 95% CI: 0–7%) patients rendered H. pylori negative had an endoscopic relapse at the end of the 12‐month follow‐up period, compared with 5/31 (16%, 95% CI: 3–29%) patients remaining H. pylori positive ( P =0.03 between H. pylori positive and negative groups). Twelve of 69 (17%, 95% CI: 8–26%) patients rendered H. pylori negative relapsed symptomatically, compared with 9/31 (29%, 95% CI: 13–45%) patients remaining H. pylori positive ( P = N.S. between groups). There was a significant improvement in epigastric pain ( P =0.0001), nausea and vomiting ( P <0.05) between entry to the study and 1, 6 and 12 months post‐treatment for both treatment groups. Conclusions : OAM eradicates H. pylori in significantly more patients than OA, but successful H. pylori eradication with either OAM or OA predisposes to low endoscopic and symptomatic relapse rates for duodenal ulcer patients when followed up for 12 months.