Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02456012
Other study ID # A-BR-104-007
Secondary ID R6IIT
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date April 2015
Est. completion date December 31, 2020

Study information

Verified date February 2022
Source National Cheng-Kung University Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a long-term prophylactic use of esomeprazole 20 mg twice daily or once daily has prevention effectiveness in reducing the recurrence of peptic ulcer bleeding after ulcer healed with 16-week oral esomeprazole therapy in high-risk patients whose Rockall score ≥ 6.


Description:

This study is conducted at the inpatient wards of National Cheng Kung University Hospital, a tertiary health care center in Tainan, and Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. All participants give written informed consent before enrollment. Each enrolled patient receives an 80 mg loading dose of intravenous esomeprazole (Nexium®, AstraZeneca AB, Södertälje, Sweden) immediately after achieving haemostasis by gastroscopy. Patients then receive a 3-day continuous high-dose (8 mg/h) esomeprazole infusion and then receive 40 mg oral esomeprazole twice daily for 11 days and once daily for following 98 days. The total duration of intravenous and oral esomeprazole is 16 weeks. After gastroscopy to confirm enrollment eligibility and ulcer healed, all patients are assessed using the Rockall risk scoring system at the primary endoscopy. Patients with Rockall scores ≥ 6 are randomized into the double-dose (D) group or the single-dose (S) group following simple randomization procedures with a 1:1 allocation ratio according to the result by the investigator who draw an envelope from a large box of sealed envelopes each containing a written code designating the D group or the S group. Patients in the D group and S groups receive 20 mg oral esomeprazole twice daily or once daily for 36 weeks, respectively. The cohort control group includes patients from a previous study who had peptic ulcer bleeding and Rockall scores ≥ 6 but who did not receive esomeprazole or other proton pump inhibitors after 16-week proton pump inhibitor treatment. One investigator generates the random allocation sequence and enrolls the participants and a different investigator assigns participants to interventions. The endoscopists and staff who check hemoglobin levels, hemodynamic status, melena, hematochezia or the aspirates through a nasogastric tube are blinded to the study group allocation. All enrolled patients are included in the intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis, but patients who are lost to follow-up, discontinued intervention because of adverse events, have a protocol violation or die are excluded from the per-protocol (PP) analysis of the primary endpoint. The range of co-morbidities evaluated by the Rockall scores include disseminated malignant diseases, liver disease (liver cirrhosis, Child-Pugh A, B, or C), renal disease (end-stage renal disease, chronic kidney disease or acute kidney injury with estimated glomerular filtration rates <30 ml/min [a score of 3 for co-morbidity], or between 30 ml/min and 60 ml/min [a score of 2 for co-morbidity]), heart disease (congestive heart failure, New York Heart Association Function I to IV or coronary artery disease). Other serious co-morbidities include lung disease (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pulmonary tuberculosis, pneumonia or empyema), rheumatoid arthritis, sepsis, new onset cerebrovascular accident or recent history of any major surgery (on the thorax, abdomen, central nervous system, long bones or spinal bones) requiring general anesthesia within 14 days before bleeding. The estimated rebleeding rate within 12 months in the cohort control group is about 15% based on the previous study. The investigators want to be able to detect a difference between the cohort control group and the D group, in which the rebleeding rate is proposed to be 2%, equal to patients with H. pylori ulcers after eradication. The ratio of the patient number in each experiment group (the D group and the S group) to the patient number in the control group is 2:5. With a two-side α value of 0.05 and power of 80% (β=0.20), the total number of patients required is 54 in each experiment group and 135 in the control to detect a difference between the two groups. Assuming the rate of loss follow-up is 10%, 60 patients in each experimental group are enrolled. The investigators use a nominal 0.05 rate of the p value. Data related to baseline characteristics and end points are evaluated using the Student t test, Pearson's χ2 test or Fisher's exact test and the Mann-Whitney U test. In the survival analysis, the log-rank test is used to compare the Kaplan-Meier curves among the three study groups. All tests are two-tailed and p values of less than 0.05 indicate significant differences.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 268
Est. completion date December 31, 2020
Est. primary completion date December 31, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 20 Years to 95 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Eligible participants included patients =20 years who had undergone gastroscopy for melena, haematochezia, or haematemesis due to bleeding peptic ulcers with major stigmata of recent hemorrhage. The major stigmata of recent haemorrhage were classified as Forrest class Ia, Ib, IIa, and IIb. All of the stigmata are given one or a combination of endoscopic therapies, including local injection of diluted epinephrine 1:10000, bipolar heated probe, argon plasma coagulation, band ligation, or hemoclip therapy. Patients will undergo a follow-up endoscopy about 12 to 16 weeks later to confirm that the ulcer has healed to be less than 0.5 cm; otherwise, patients are not enrolled. Exclusion Criteria: - Patients are excluded if they had tumor bleeding or ulcer bleeding due to the presence of a Dieulafoy lesion or mechanical factors (e.g, gastrostomy tube induction), comorbid with reflux esophagitis grade C or D, Barrett's esophagus, or marginal ulcer bleeding, hypersensitivity to esomeprazole or any component of the formulation, or had previously participated in the study. Because of concern for patient safety with certain drug-drug interactions, patients who receive anti-platelet therapy, e.g., aspirin, clopidogrel, or others for prophylaxis of established cardiovascular or cerebrovascular diseases will be excluded.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
oral esomeprazole 20 mg twice daily
for 36 weeks
oral esomeprazole 20 mg once daily
for 36 weeks

Locations

Country Name City State
Taiwan Helicobacter pylori study group, National Cheng Kung University Hospital Tainan

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Hsiu-Chi Cheng

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Taiwan, 

References & Publications (7)

Chan HL, Wu JC, Chan FK, Choi CL, Ching JY, Lee YT, Leung WK, Lau JY, Chung SC, Sung JJ. Is non-Helicobacter pylori, non-NSAID peptic ulcer a common cause of upper GI bleeding? A prospective study of 977 patients. Gastrointest Endosc. 2001 Apr;53(4):438-42. — View Citation

Cheng HC, Wu CT, Chang WL, Cheng WC, Chen WY, Sheu BS. Double oral esomeprazole after a 3-day intravenous esomeprazole infusion reduces recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding in high-risk patients: a randomised controlled study. Gut. 2014 Dec;63(12):1864-72. doi: 10.1136/gutjnl-2013-306531. Epub 2014 Mar 21. — View Citation

Chow DK, Sung JJ. Non-NSAID non-H. pylori ulcer disease. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol. 2009;23(1):3-9. doi: 10.1016/j.bpg.2008.11.010. Review. — View Citation

Hung LC, Ching JY, Sung JJ, To KF, Hui AJ, Wong VW, Leong RW, Chan HL, Wu JC, Leung WK, Lee YT, Chung SC, Chan FK. Long-term outcome of Helicobacter pylori-negative idiopathic bleeding ulcers: a prospective cohort study. Gastroenterology. 2005 Jun;128(7):1845-50. — View Citation

Marmo R, Koch M, Cipolletta L, Capurso L, Grossi E, Cestari R, Bianco MA, Pandolfo N, Dezi A, Casetti T, Lorenzini I, Germani U, Imperiali G, Stroppa I, Barberani F, Boschetto S, Gigliozzi A, Gatto G, Peri V, Buzzi A, Della Casa D, Di Cicco M, Proietti M, Aragona G, Giangregorio F, Allegretta L, Tronci S, Michetti P, Romagnoli P, Piubello W, Ferri B, Fornari F, Del Piano M, Pagliarulo M, Di Mitri R, Trallori G, Bagnoli S, Frosini G, Macchiarelli R, Sorrentini I, Pietrini L, De Stefano S, Ceglia T, Chiozzini G, Salvagnini M, Di Muzio D, Rotondano G; Italian registry on upper gastrointestinal bleeding (Progetto Nazionale Emorragie Digestive--PNED 2). Predicting mortality in non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeders: validation of the Italian PNED Score and Prospective Comparison with the Rockall Score. Am J Gastroenterol. 2010 Jun;105(6):1284-91. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2009.687. Epub 2010 Jan 5. — View Citation

Rockall TA, Logan RF, Devlin HB, Northfield TC. Risk assessment after acute upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Gut. 1996 Mar;38(3):316-21. — View Citation

Wong GL, Wong VW, Chan Y, Ching JY, Au K, Hui AJ, Lai LH, Chow DK, Siu DK, Lui YN, Wu JC, To KF, Hung LC, Chan HL, Sung JJ, Chan FK. High incidence of mortality and recurrent bleeding in patients with Helicobacter pylori-negative idiopathic bleeding ulcers. Gastroenterology. 2009 Aug;137(2):525-31. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2009.05.006. Epub 2009 May 13. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Medical events, including diarrhea and pneumonia, and bone fracture The definition of diarrhea is that the presence of loose or watery stools = three times a day lasted for one day at least. The definition of pneumonia is the presence of one of the symptoms and signs of fever, chills, purulent productive cough, and shortness of breath plus a typical infiltrative patch on chest X-ray. Additionally, any bone fracture, including a partial or complete break in the bone, is monitored until the last follow-up date at outpatient departments. During the period of taking PPIs and until two weeks after discontinuing PPIs.
Primary The recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding during the 1st year The recurrent bleeding is de?ned as 1) recurrent melena, haematochezia, the presence of bloody aspirates through a nasogastric tube and 2) relapse of haemodynamic instability, including systolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg, heart rate >120 bpm or a drop in haemoglobin concentration of >2 g/dL, or sudden increase in transfusion requirements. For each patient with either suspected or active rebleeding, the hemoglobin level and gastroscopy are performed to confirm any blood or coffee-ground-like materials in the stomach, or the persistence of stigmata indicating recent haemorrhage. The gastroscopy also determines whether the source of rebleeding was a peptic ulcer or some other non-ulcer bleeding source, such as varices. 52 weeks
Secondary The recurrence of peptic ulcer confirmed by follow-up endoscopy In each patient, the follow-up endoscopy will be performed during the period between the 17th and 52th weeks and the definition of recurrence of ulcer is the size of ulcer > 0.5 cm. between the 17th and 52th weeks
Secondary The recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding during the second year-and-thereafter After the 52-week therapy, the patients in Group D and S used oral PPIs or not at the discretion of their physicians according to clinical needs. Thus, these patients are divided into the PPIs on-demand group and the PPIs discontinued group. The definition of recurrent bleeding is as the primary outcome. Since the 2nd year to the study end
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT01125852 - Supplementary Angiographic Embolization for Peptic Ulcer Bleeding N/A
Completed NCT00840008 - The Dissemination of Consensus Recommendations on Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding Phase 4
Terminated NCT00164905 - Role of Doppler Ultrasound in Severe Peptic Ulcer Hemorrhage N/A
Completed NCT05563714 - Anticoagulation With Enhanced Gastrointestinal Safety N/A
Completed NCT03362281 - Ilaprazole for the Treatment and Prevention of Peptic Ulcer Bleeding in Chinese Patients Phase 3
Completed NCT00164931 - A Study Comparing High Dose Omeprazole Infusion Against Scheduled Second Endoscopy for Bleeding Peptic Ulcer Phase 3
Completed NCT04211194 - Registry for Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding
Completed NCT01241266 - China Survey of Peptic Ulcer Bleeding N/A
Completed NCT00037570 - Study Evaluating Pantoprazole in Peptic Ulcer Hemorrhage Phase 2
Completed NCT00731601 - Intravenous Proton Pump Inhibitor for Peptic Ulcer Bleeding Phase 4
Completed NCT05248321 - Precise Delivery of Tranexamic Acid to Enhance Endoscopic Hemostasis for Peptic Ulcer Bleeding N/A
Recruiting NCT00687336 - Helicobacter Pylori Empiric Treatment in Ulcer Bleeding Phase 4
Not yet recruiting NCT06273384 - Diagnostic Performance of CIM for Helicobacter Pylori Infection in Patients With Peptic Ulcer Bleeding
Terminated NCT00165009 - Resolution Endoclips Vs Epinephrine Injection and Heater Probe Phase 3
Completed NCT03163680 - Efficacy of Low Dose of Proton Pump Inhibitor in Treatment Bleeding Ulcers
Completed NCT00279123 - Effects of 2 Different Doses of Pantoprazole on Gastric pH and Recurrent Bleeding in Patients Who Bled From Peptic Ulcers Phase 4
Completed NCT03362268 - IIaprazole for the Treatment and Prevention of Peptic Ulcer Bleeding in Chinese Patients Phase 2
Completed NCT00573924 - Trial of Oral Versus Intravenous Proton Pump Inhibitor on Intragastric pH in Patients With Bleeding Ulcers N/A
Withdrawn NCT02724150 - Comparison of Low Against High Regimen of Proton Pump Inhibitors for Treatment of Acute Peptic Ulcer Bleeding Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT04536428 - ClearEndoclip Versus EZ Clip for Upper Gastrointestinal Ulcer Bleeding N/A