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Study Comparing Sequential and Concomitant Therapy for Helicobacter Pylori Eradication in Routine Clinical Practice

Phase 4
Completed
Conditions
Helicobacter Pylori
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT01273441
Lead Sponsor
Fundación de Investigación Biomédica - Hospital Universitario de La Princesa
Brief Summary

Helicobacter pylori is the main cause of chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer and gastric tumors (adenocarcinoma and lymphoma). The cure of the H. pylori infection prevents recurrence of duodenal and gastric ulcer and improves dyspepsia in a significant proportion of cases, so it is cost-effective.

Eradication therapy has changed over time. The usually recommended pattern in the consensus conferences has traditionally been triple therapy, composed by the combination of 2 antibiotics (clarithromycin plus amoxicillin or metronidazole) and a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) for 7-14 days. Recent meta-analyses have that the current global eradication rate after standard triple therapy is less than 80%. Several European studies have found even lower eradication rates, with 35-40% of cases resulting in treatment failure. Treatment failure leads to a second treatment and a new diagnostic test to confirm eradication.

Detailed Description

Justification of the study:

One of the latest therapeutic innovations is sequential therapy, introduced in Italy by Zullo et al. The drug delivery strategy involves a 5-day induction phase with dual therapy (a PPI every 12 hours and amoxicillin 1g every 12 hours), followed immediately by triple therapy for 5 days with a PPI every 12 hours, metronidazole 500 mg every 12 hours and clarithromycin 500 mg every 12 hours. Sequential therapy has proved more effectiveness than standard triple therapy for seven and ten days. In order to assess the efficacy of this new treatment in our area, over the past year we conducted a multicentre observational pilot study in routine clinical practice conditions in patients infected with H. pylori and with indications for eradication. 139 patients from 6 different centres were included. Excellent treatment compliance and minimal side effects, similar to those described with triple therapy, were shown. The results confirm similar efficacy to that obtained in previous studies and an eradication rate significantly higher than that obtained with classic triple therapy in our area.

Several previous studies have shown excellent efficacy of quadruple therapy with a PPI, amoxicillin, clarithromycin and metronidazole, administering "concomitantly" the same drugs as those of sequential therapy, but only for 5-7 days. Several studies have found a higher eradication rate of this "concomitant" therapy as compared with classic triple therapy. The results of a randomized study in which sequential and concomitant therapy were compared have recently been reported in the American Congress of Gastroenterology. Eradication and adverse events rates were similar with both treatments. This data suggest that the "sequentially"administration of these drugs probably complicated unnecessarily the treatment.

Therefore it is necessary to make a controlled clinical trial to directly compare "sequential" versus "concomitant" therapy. The results of this study will conclude which should be the first line treatment for H. pylori eradication.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
338
Inclusion Criteria
  • Inclusion of patients with dyspepsia or peptic gastroduodenal ulcer for whom eradication treatment is indicated.
  • Requirement of confirmation of the diagnosis of H. pylori infection by at least one positive test out of the following: breath test, histology, rapid urease test or culture.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Age less than 18 years.
  • Advanced chronic disease or any other pathology that prevents attending controls and follow up.
  • Allergy to any of the antibiotics in the treatment.
  • Previous gastric surgery
  • Pregnancy and lactation.
  • History of alcohol or drug abuse.
  • Previous eradication treatment.
  • Consumption of antibiotics or bismuth salts during the last 4 weeks

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Sequential treatment:PPI, amoxicillin, metronidazole and clarithromycin-
Concomitant treatmentPPI, amoxicillin, metronidazole and clarithromycin-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
"Intention to treat" eradication ratesOne year

"Intention-to-treat" eradication of infection.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
"Per protocol" Eradication rateOne year

"Per protocol" eradication of infection.

ComplianceOne year

Treatment compliance

Clinical and demographic variablesOne year

Age Sex Smoking habits Comorbidity (diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, ischemic heart disease, dyslipidemia, others) Indication for eradication (peptic ulcer vs. uninvestigated or functional dyspepsia) Initial diagnostic test for H. pylori infection.

Adverse eventsOne year

Adverse events

Trial Locations

Locations (11)

Hospital Universitario de La Princesa

🇪🇸

Madrid, Spain

Hospital Mútua de Terrassa

🇪🇸

Terrassa, Spain

Hospital Universitario Río Hortega

🇪🇸

Valladolid, Spain

Hospital de Cabueñes

🇪🇸

Gijón, Spain

Hospital del Mar

🇪🇸

Barcelona, Spain

Hospital San Jorge

🇪🇸

Huesca, Spain

Hospital Costa del Sol

🇪🇸

Málaga, Spain

Hospital de Sabadell

🇪🇸

Sabadell, Spain

Hospital Universitario de Valme

🇪🇸

Sevilla, Spain

Hospital Clínico Universitario "Lozano Blesa"

🇪🇸

Zaragoza, Spain

Hospital San Pedro de Alcántara

🇪🇸

Cáceres, Spain

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