Comparison of Lafutidine and Rabeprazole in 7-day Second-line Amoxicillin- and Metronidazole-Containing Triple Therapy for Helicobacter pylori: A Pilot Study
2012
Background: Lafutidine is an H2-receptor antagonist with gastroprotective action through capsaicin-sensitive afferent neurons and relatively inexpensive compare to proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs). A 7-day course of PPIs–amoxicillin–metronidazole is recommended as standard second-line Helicobacter pylori therapy and is covered by national health insurance in Japan. The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy and safety of second-line eradication using the H2-receptor antagonist lafutidine as a substitute for a PPI.
Materials and Methods: Fifty-two patients who failed in first-line eradication using PPI–amoxicillin–clarithromycin were randomly assigned to a 7-day course of rabeprazole at 10 mg b.i.d., amoxicillin at 750 mg b.i.d., and metronidazole at 250 mg b.i.d. (RPZ-AM) or a 7-day course of lafutidine at 10 mg t.i.d., amoxicillin at 750 mg b.i.d., and metronidazole at 250 mg b.i.d. (LFT-AM) as second-line therapy. Eradication was assessed by the 13C urea breath test. A drug susceptibility test was performed before the second-line therapy.
Results: Prior to second-line H. pylori eradication, the rate of resistance to clarithromycin was 86.5% and the rate of resistance to metronidazole was 3.8%. The eradication rates for both LFT-AM and RPZ-AM groups were 96% (95%CI = 88.6–100%). There were no severe adverse events in either group.
Conclusions: Lafutidine plus metronidazole–amoxicillin as second-line therapy provided a high eradication rate and safe treatment similar to a PPI-based regimen. Lafutidine-based eradication therapy is therefore considered to be a promising alternative and is also expected to reduce health care costs in H. pylori eradication.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
22
References
12
Citations
NaN
KQI