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Research Article

Dyspepsia in Primary Care: Acid Suppression as Effective as Prokinetic Therapy. A Randomized Clinical Trial

Pages 942-947 | Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Background: While dyspeptic patients in primary care often receive empirical treatment with antisecretory drugs, a substantial number suffer from motility disturbances which may be associated with their complaints. We aimed to compare the effectiveness of treatment with antisecretory treatment with a prokinetic agent in uninvestigated dyspepsia. Methods: 563 patients presenting dyspeptic complaints to the general practitioner with a low likelihood of organic (ulcer, reflux or malignant) disease, i.e. absence of alarm symptoms or a history of peptic ulcer disease or gastro-oesophageal reflux disease were included. They entered a randomized, double-blind trial of 4 weeks of ranitidine 150 mg bid compared with 4 weeks of cisapride 10 mg bid, with 3 months follow-up. Treatment failure was defined as no response to treatment or a relapse of symptoms within the follow-up period. Also studied were the effect on dyspepsia severity, response to treatment after 4 weeks, and time to relapse. Results: For all randomized patients, the incidence of overall treatment success after 3 months follow-up with antisecretory treatment was 107/271 (39.5%) and with a prokinetic agent 122/282 (43.3%); the risk difference was 3.8% (95% CI-4.4% to 12.0%); the difference in symptom severity score after 4 weeks of treatment was 0.3; 95% CI-0.4% to 1.0%. For patients responding to 4 weeks of treatment, relapsefree time was 86 days in the prokinetic group and 79 days in the acid suppression group (P = 0.005). Conclusions: Antisecretory and prokinetic therapies are equally effective in primary care patients with uninvestigated dyspeptic complaints, though relapse rates are lower in patients treated with prokinetic treatment.

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