Helicobacter Pylori Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison Between Hybrid, Reverse Hybrid, and Non-Bismuth Levofloxacin Quadruple Regimens for Helicobacter Pylori Infection in Egypt: A Randomized Controlled Trial
The overall prevalence of H. Pylori in the developing countries is 50.8%, with the highest one presented in Africa (79.1%). Hybrid therapy is supposed to be more effective as a first-line regimen for Helicobacter pylori infection in Egypt than the Reverse hybrid and non-bismuth Levofloxacin quadruple therapies. We are aiming here to compare the Hybrid, Reverse hybrid, and Levofloxacin quadruple therapies as first-line therapy, trying to reach the safest, cost-effective, and compliance-inducing regimen in Egypt. We will conduct a randomized controlled (interventional) study at Zagazig University Hospital, internal medicine department clinic, on 330 patients. 110 patients will be allocated to each regimen.
Introduction:
Although the decreasing prevalence of Helicobacter Pylori (H. Pylori) worldwide, it remains
high in developing countries. According to the most recent studies, the overall prevalence of
H. Pylori in the developing countries is 50.8%, with the highest one presented in Africa
(79.1%).
Unfortunately, the data on the prevalence of H. Pylori, are not available from all the
countries of Africa. There is a paucity of information about the magnitude of the problem in
Egypt, according to the few available studies, the prevalence is ranging from 71.7-91.7%.
The importance of H. Pylori infection lies in the major role in chronic gastritis, gastric
ulcer, and duodenal ulcer, up to gastric adenocarcinoma, and gastric mucosa-associated
lymphoid tissue lymphoma.
Diagnosis of H. Pylori can be through invasive tests, which are cumbersome and expensive
despite their high sensitivity and specificity. On the contrary, there are more easily and
cheaper non-invasive tests, especially H. Pylori stool antigen and urea breath test that has
a higher sensitivity than serology.
The decreasing eradication rate of the standard triple therapy (STT) below 80% due to the
emergence of resistant strains to Clarithromycin, raise the need for newer therapies that
provide higher efficacy, and in the same time, better safety and compliance.
Bismuth-containing quadruple therapy came as the treatment of choice that avoids
Clarithromycin use, but it was a non-reasonable option for the countries that are lacking in
bismuth salts and/or tetracycline, beside of the complex administration and low safety. It
raises the era of the competing sequential and concomitant non-bismuth (clarithromycin
containing) quadruple treatments.
A novel two-step (dual-quadruple) treatment called the hybrid therapy (HT), which is actually
a combined sequential and concomitant therapy, with a lower cost and better efficacy.
However, the adding of two drugs in the last seven days of the therapy may confuse the
patient, making him less willing to complete the treatment that promote the idea of reversing
the sequence (quadruple-dual) in what is called the reverse hybrid therapy (RHT), to simplify
the treatment in one-step two-phase treatment.
Another non-Clarithromycin non-Bismuth quadruple therapy that is less complex and safer than
bismuth quadruple therapy, which is called Levofloxacin quadruple therapy that contains
levofloxacin, omeprazole, nitazoxanide, and doxycycline (LOND), showed promising results on
the level of the cure rate and low drug resistance profile.
Methods:
Technical Design:
A) The site of study:
The study was conducted in Internal medicine department clinic in Zagazig University
Hospitals.
B) Sample size:
Assuming that the eradication rate in patients receiving Hybrid therapy is 91% versus 78.3%
in Reverse Hybrid therapy. So, the sample size is 309, using OPEN EPI at power 80% and C.I
95%.
Tools of data collection:
1. Medical history to all participants.
2. Complete clinical examination.
3. The fecal antigen test (FAT) which identifies H. pylori antigen in the stool by enzyme
immunoassay was positive in all participants.
Operational design:
A) This is a randomized (interventional) study conducted at Zagazig University Hospital,
internal medicine department clinic after informed consent. All the participants were
positive for H. pylori fecal antigen test.
B) Steps of performance: (330) participants were chosen from the Internal Medicine Department
clinic, grouped into 3 groups:
1. Group 1: (110) participants received reverse hybrid regimen in the form of
clarithromycin 500mg bid, omeprazole 20 mg bid, amoxicillin 1gm bid, and metronidazole
500 mg tid for 1 week, followed by omeprazole 20 mg bid, and amoxicillin 1gm bid in the
2nd week.
2. Group2: (110) participants received hybrid regimen in the form of omeprazole 20 mg bid,
and amoxicillin 1gm bid in the 1st week, then clarithromycin 500mg bid, omeprazole 20 mg
bid, amoxicillin 1gm bid, and metronidazole 500 mg tid in the 2nd week.
3. Group3: (110) participants received Levofloxacin quadruple regimen (LOAD) in the form of
nitazoxanide 500 mg bid, levofloxacin 250 mg QD, omeprazole 40 mg QD, and doxycycline
100 mg QD for 10 days
C) Retesting by The fecal antigen test (FAT) after stopping the regimen by at least one month
and withholding proton pump inhibitors for four weeks.
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