To elucidate whether pretreatment with omeprazole decreases the cure rate of Helicobacter pylori infection with a new quadruple therapy, and thus, whether this pretreatment should not be used in clinical practice, we conducted a randomized trial. Ninety patients with chronic peptic ulcer disease and nonulcer dyspepsia, with biopsy-proven H. pylori infection were randomly assigned to the two following regimens: Group 1 (n = 45) received omeprazole 20 mg once daily for 2 weeks (days 1-14), and 500 mg amoxicillin granules and 250 mg metronidazole thrice daily, and roxithromycin 150 mg twice daily for 1 week (days 8-14), Group 2 (n = 45) received the same antibiotic treatment as group 1 for 1 week (days 1-7), in addition to omeprazole treatment for 2 weeks (days 1-14). Four weeks after the treatment ended, endoscopy was repeated, with two biopsy specimens each taken from the antrum and the corpus (total of four specimens) for a urease test, histological analysis, and culture to establish cure of infection. A patient was regarded as cured only if all three methods gave negative results for H. pylori. In the intention-to-treat analysis, 42 of 45 patients (93.3%; 95% confidence intervals [CI], 81.7%-98.6%) in group 1 were cured compared with 43 of 45 patients (95.6%; 95% CI, 84.9%-99.5%) in group 2. In the per-protocol analysis, the corresponding figures were 42/44 (95.5%; 95% CI 84.5%-99.4%) and 43/44 (97.7%; 95% CI, 88.0%-99.9%). There were no significant differences in the cure rate between the two groups on either analysis. All patients, except for one who had an allergic reaction, completed the treatment regimens. Fifty to sixty percent of the patients had no side effects while the rest had mild to moderate side effects. The new quadruple therapy consisting of omeprazole, amoxicillin, metronidazole, and roxithromycin appears suitable for use in clinical practice, as the cure rate was 95% and no severe side effects were observed. Pretreatment with omeprazole did not reduce the cure rate for this new quadruple therapy.
INTRODUCTIONUp to now, four regimens have generally been used for the eradication of Helicobacter pylori; namely, a bismuthbased triple therapy, a dual therapy consisting of omeprazole plus amoxycillin or clarithromycin, a standard triple therapy consisting of proton pump inhibitor and two antibiotics, either clarithromycin and metronidazole or amoxycillin, and a quadruple therapy 1 consisting of proton pump inhibitor plus bismuth based triple therapy. As in any other infectious disease it is essential in treatment studies of H. pylori infection to stratify the SUMMARY Background: There have been no reports concerning the ef®cacy and safety of a 1-week quadruple therapy regimen of omeprazole, amoxycillin, roxithromycin and metronidazole for Helicobacter pylori infections and the impact of primary resistance on the eradication rate. Methods: One hundred and sixty-nine consecutive patients with peptic ulcer disease as well as gastritis with biopsy-proven H. pylori infection were entered into an open study of omeprazole 20 mg o.m., amoxycillin 500 mg t.d.s., roxithromycin 150 mg b.d., and metronidazole 250 mg t.d.s. Helicobacter pylori status was determined by urease test, histology and culture. Susceptibility to amoxycillin, metronidazole and roxithromycin was determined by the E-test. Results: H. pylori was eradicated in 155 out of 169 (92%; 95% CI 88±96%) by intention-to-treat analysis, and in 155 out of 163 (95%; 95% CI 92±98%) by per protocol analysis. The prevalence of primary resistance against amoxycillin, roxithromycin and metronidazole was 2 out of 166 (1%), 16 out of 166 (10%) and 27 out of 166 (16%), respectively. H. pylori was eradicated in 25 out of 27 (93%) patients with
The hepatic expression of multidrug-resistance protein 4 was enhanced in patients with untreated PBC at all stages. However, the hepatic expression of multidrug-resistance protein 2 and multidrug-resistance protein 3 was enhanced only in early-stage patients. The lack of upregulation of these proteins might contribute to the progression of PBC.
Recurrence of peptic ulcer after successful eradication of Helicobacter pylori is closely associated with reinfection. The aim of this study was to examine the recurrence of peptic ulcer and reinfection with H. pylori after successful eradication. To eradicate H. pylori infection, patients with active peptic ulcer disease were assigned to two treatment groups depending on the year of their enrollment (AM group and OAMR group). Patients in the AM group received 400 mg of cimetidine twice per day, 300 mg of amoxicillin three times per day, and 250 mg of metronidazole three times per day for 2 weeks. Patients in the OAMR group received 20 mg of omeprazole once per day, 500 mg of amoxicillin granules three times per day, 250 mg of metronidazole three times per day, and 150 mg of roxithromycin twice per day for 1 week. After endoscopy verified ulcer scarring and successful eradication of H. pylori infection, study patients were followed up monthly and did not undergo acid-suppressive therapy. Endoscopy was performed at 6-month intervals for the 1st year. After the 1st year, follow-up endoscopies were performed annually. In total, 107 patients with peptic ulcer (duodenal ulcer [DU], 65; gastric ulcer [GU], 42) were followed up for a mean period of approximately 2 years. Recurrence of infection occurred in 10 (9.3%) of 107 patients (AM group, 9; OAMR group, 1) after 210 patient-years of follow-up; the recurrence rate was 4.8% per patient-year. Recurrence of H. pylori infection was significantly higher in the AM group (23.1%) than in the OAMR group (1.5%). H. pylori infection recurred in two patients 6 months after eradication therapy, in seven 1 year after, and in one 2 years after. Thereafter, no further cases of H. pylori recurrence were observed. During follow-up periods, seven cases of ulcer recurrence were observed (DU, 4; GU, 3). The rate of peptic ulcer recurrence within 2 years after eradication therapy was significantly higher than that after more than 2 years. Four cases of ulcer recurrence (DU, 3; GU, 1) also had recurrence of H. pylori infection. One recurrent case of DU without reinfection was associated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The remaining two cases of GU recurred without H. pylori reinfection. In conclusion, peptic ulcer recurrence rarely occurred (3 [2.9%] of 103) in patients cured of H. pylori infection. Reinfection after apparent successful eradication was rarely noted when a powerful therapeutic regimen in eradication was used. Therefore, to eradicate H. pylori, a highly effective therapeutic regimen should always be used.
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