Challenging the dogma: A randomized trial of standard vs. half-dose concomitant nonbismuth quadruple therapy for Helicobacter pylori infection

Abstract

Background: Current treatment of Helicobacter pylori consists of three or four drugs for 7-14 days with important associated cost and adverse events. Aims: This study compared efficacy and safety of standard dose vs. half-dose concomitant nonbismuth quadruple therapy (NBQT) for 7 days. The standard dose consisted of twice daily rabeprazole 20 mg, amoxicillin 1 g, metronidazole 500 mg, and clarithromycin 500 mg. Methods: This was a prospective randomized trial.14C-urea breath test was performed ≥4 weeks after treatment and ≥2 weeks off acid suppressive therapy. Compliance and adverse events were monitored during treatment. Results: A total of 200 consecutive treatment-naïve patients were enrolled. Baseline characteristics were similar between groups, with 15.5% of subjects reporting prior macrolide use. Eradication occurred in 78% (95% CI 68.6-85.7%) in both groups on intention-to-treat analysis. Per-protocol rates were 82.1 vs. 83.9% for standard-dose patients vs. half-dose patients, respectively (p = NS). Adverse events (only mild) were reported in 57 vs. 41% of standard-dose patients vs. half-dose patients (p = 0.024), with metallic taste and nausea notably less frequent in the latter (36 vs. 12% and 18 vs. 7%, respectively; p<0.05 for both). Overall, eradication failed in 38.7% of prior macrolide users vs. 18.9% without such exposure (p = 0.019). On multivariate logistic regression, prior macrolide exposure was the only factor associated with failed eradication (OR 2.60, 95% CI 1.06-6.39; p = 0.038). Treatment was cheaper with the half-dose regimen. Interpretation: A 50% reduction in antibiotic dosage does not diminish efficacy of concomitant nonbismuth quadruple therapy but leads to significant reduction in cost and adverse events. Seven-day concomitant NBQT is suboptimal for H. pylori independent of prior macrolide exposure. © Author(s) 2014.

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Keywords

Adverse events, Dyspepsia, Eradication, Gastritis, Pylori, Amoxicillin, Clarithromycin, Metronidazole, Rabeprazole, Abdominal pain, Adult, Article, Cost effectiveness analysis, Diarrhea, Drug dose comparison, Drug efficacy, Drug safety, Eradication therapy, Female, Helicobacter infection, Human, Major clinical study, Male, Metallic taste, Nausea, Nonbismuth quadruple therapy, Priority journal, Prospective study, Randomized controlled trial, Urea breath test

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