Skip to content

Comparison of Two Novel First-line Anti-Helicobacter Pylori Therapy

Comparison of Two Novel First-line Anti-Helicobacter Pylori Therapy: A Prospective Randomized Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03383003
Enrollment
240
Registered
2017-12-26
Start date
2016-03-01
Completion date
2018-05-01
Last updated
2019-01-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Helicobacter Pylori Infection

Keywords

Helicobacter pylori eradication, High dose proton pump inhibitor, High dose Amoxicillin, Concomitant therapy

Brief summary

The Asian-Pacific Consensus Report has recommended that proton pump inhibitor (PPI)-clarithromycin-amoxicillin or metronidazole treatment for 7 to14 days is the first choice treatment for H pylori infection. As a general rule for the treatment of other infectious diseases, clinicians should prescribe therapeutic regimens that have a per-protocol eradication rate ≥ 90% for anti-H pylori therapy. However, the eradication rate of the standard triple therapy has generally declined to unacceptable levels (i.e., 80% or less) recently. The reasons for this fall in efficacy with time may relate to the increasing incidence of clarithromycin-resistant strains of H. pylori. Clarithromycin resistance is the major cause of eradication failure for stand triple therapy. Standard triple therapies should be abandoned in the areas with clarithromycin resistance ≥ 20% because the per-protocol eradication rates of standard therapies are often less than 85% and the intention-to-treat eradication rates are usually less than 80%..7-10 day non-bismuth containing quadruple therapy (Concomitant therapy) had been successful in the presence of clarithromycin resistance. Another novel treatment with 14-day high dose PPI and amoxicilin dual therapy could also attained \>90 eradication rate in some studies. This novel treatment is simple and involved only two drugs and the most important of all is that amoxicillin resistance is still 0% in Taiwan . High dose PPI has been used in several studies for H. pylori eradication in order to increase the intra-gastric PH for optimal eradication So far, there is still unclear which one is the best first-line H. pylori eradication regimen with highest eradication rate and least adverse effects. We therefore design a randomized controlled trial to simultaneously assess the efficacy novel 14-day high dose dual therapy by comparing to the 7-day non-bismuth containing quadruple therapy in Taiwan and to investigate the host and bacterial factors predicting the treatment outcomes of eradication therapies.

Detailed description

The Asian-Pacific Consensus Report has recommended that proton pump inhibitor (PPI)-clarithromycin-amoxicillin or metronidazole treatment for 7 to14 days is the first choice treatment for H pylori infection. As a general rule for the treatment of other infectious diseases, clinicians should prescribe therapeutic regimens that have a per-protocol eradication rate ≥ 90% for anti-H pylori therapy. However, the eradication rate of the standard triple therapy has generally declined to unacceptable levels (i.e., 80% or less) recently.\[3-9\] The reasons for this fall in efficacy with time may relate to the increasing incidence of clarithromycin-resistant strains of H. pylori. The main reasons for eradication failure for H pylori infection include antibiotic resistance, poor compliance and rapid metabolism of PPI. Clarithromycin resistance is the major cause of eradication failure for stand triple therapy. The rate of clarithromycin-resistant strains ranged from 49% (Spain) to 1% (Netherland) worldwide. Standard triple therapies should be abandoned in the areas with clarithromycin resistance ≥ 20% because the per-protocol eradication rates of standard therapies are often less than 85% and the intention-to-treat eradication rates are usually less than 80%. 7-10 day non-bismuth containing quadruple therapy (Concomitant therapy) had been successful in the presence of clarithromycin resistance. Another novel treatment with 14-day high dose PPI and amoxicilin dual therapy could also attained \>90 eradication rate in some studies. This novel treatment is simple and involved only two drugs and the most important of all is that amoxicillin resistance is still 0% in Taiwan. High dose PPI has been used in several studies for H. pylori eradication in order to increase the intra-gastric PH for optimal eradication So far, there is still unclear which one is the best first-line H. pylori eradication regimen with highest eradication rate and least adverse effects. We therefore design a randomized controlled trial to simultaneously assess the efficacy novel 14-day high dose dual therapy by comparing to the 7-day non-bismuth containing quadruple therapy in Taiwan and to investigate the host and bacterial factors predicting the treatment outcomes of eradication therapies.

Interventions

DRUGNexium

Esomeprazole ( Nexium )40 mg tid daily for 14 days in the high dose dual therapyarm and 40 mg bid daily for 7 days in the non-bismuth quadruple therapy

DRUGAmolin

Amoxicillin 750 mg qid daily for 14 days in the high dose dual therapy and amoxicillin 1 g bid daily for 7 days in the non-bismuth quadruple therapy

clarithromycin 500 mg bid daily for 7 days in the non-bismuth quadruple therapy

DRUGFlagyl

Metronidazole (Flagyl) 500 mg tid daily for 7 days in the non-bismuth quadruple therapy

Sponsors

Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1\. H. pylori-infected outpatients with endoscopically proven peptic ulcer diseases or gastritis.

Exclusion criteria

1. Previous H. pylori-eradication therapy 2. ingestion of antibiotics, bismuth, or PPIs within the prior 4 weeks 3. patients with allergic history to the medications used 4. patients with previous gastric surgery 5. the coexistence of serious concomitant illness (for example, decompensated liver cirrhosis, uremia) 6. pregnant women.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The rates of H.pylori eradication6-8 weeks after treatmentThe primary outcome variables were the rates of eradication. Chi-square test with or without Yates correction for continuity and Fisher's exact test were used when appropriate to compare the major outcomes between groups. A P value less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Countries

Taiwan

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026