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Original Article

Triple Therapy of Helicobacter pylori Infection in Peptic Ulcer: A 12-Month Follow-up Study of 93 Patients

, , , , , & show all
Pages 973-976 | Received 03 Jan 1992, Accepted 07 Jul 1992, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

This study was undertaken to evaluate the success of triple therapy in peptic ulcer patients and ulcer relapses. One hundred and one Consecutive Helicobacter pylori-positive peptic ulcer patients were assigned to an open trial with 2 weeks of treatment with colloidal bismuth subcitrate, amoxicillin, and metronidazole. At the 6-week follow-up only 1 duodenal ulcer was unhealed of 57 active ulcers, and H. pylori was found to be eradicated in 84% of the 100 subjects. The sensitivity to metronidazole was determined from 71 pretreatment strains of H. pylori. Eradication of H. pylori succeeded in 89% of the patients with metronidazole-susceptible strains and in 615% of patients with metronidazole-resistant strains (p > 0.03). All 16 patients in whom the treatment failed to eradicate the organism had metronidazole-resistant strains after treatment. The ulcer relapse rate was low. At the 12-month follow-up of 03 patients only 1 of the 84 H. pylori-negative patients (including 4 patients after new successful therapy) had relapsing ulcers (2 asymptomatic episodes), and 1 had H. pylori reinfection. whereas 3 of the 9 bacteria-positive patients relapsed (p = 0.002); at the 2-year control 2 more patients had ulcer relapses. The eradication of H. pylori infection clearly prevents relapses of peptic ulcer, but the success of triple therapy depends on the frequency of pretreatment metronidazole-resistant strains.

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