Sung-Shuo Kao, Deng-Chyan Wu, Seng-Kee Chuah, John Y Kao, Wei-Chen Tai, Chang-Bih Shie, I-Ting Wu, Wen-Chih Chen, Feng-Woei Tsay, Yan-Hua Chen, Ping-I Hsu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Whether continuous proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy is superior to on-demand therapy for symptom control of Barrett's esophagus patients is unclear. The study aimed to compare the efficacies of the symptom control and the frequency of co-existent erosive esophagitis in patients with Barrett's esophagus by either continuous or on-demand PPI therapy.
Methods: We randomly assigned (1:1) consecutive adult patients with symptomatic Barrett's esophagus to receive on-demand or continuous esomeprazole (40 mg q.d.) therapy for 40 weeks following an initial treatment with esomeprazole 40 mg daily for 8 weeks. A follow-up endoscopy was conducted at week 48. The primary outcome was total number of symptomatic days. The secondary outcome was the frequency of co-existent erosive esophagitis at week 48.
Results: From February 2010 to December 2022, we randomly assigned 235 eligible patients to receive either on-demand (n = 119) or continuous (n = 116) esomeprazole therapy. The on-demand and continuous groups did not signicantly differ in symptom scores at each follow-up time point. Two treatment groups had a comparable total number of symptom days (27.7 ± 41.5 vs 24.3 ± 47.7; P = 0.570) but the on-demand group took fewer esomeprazole tablets than the continuous group (230.6 ± 96.5 vs 330.0 ± 15.6; P < 0.001). At week 48, the on-demand and continuous groups had comparable frequencies of erosive esophagitis (10.6% vs 6.7%).
Conclusion: On-demand PPI therapy reduces the total amount of PPI used while achieving similar symptom relief compared to continuous PPI therapy in patients with Barrett's esophagus.
期刊介绍:
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association (JFMA), published continuously since 1902, is an open access international general medical journal of the Formosan Medical Association based in Taipei, Taiwan. It is indexed in Current Contents/ Clinical Medicine, Medline, ciSearch, CAB Abstracts, Embase, SIIC Data Bases, Research Alert, BIOSIS, Biological Abstracts, Scopus and ScienceDirect.
As a general medical journal, research related to clinical practice and research in all fields of medicine and related disciplines are considered for publication. Article types considered include perspectives, reviews, original papers, case reports, brief communications, correspondence and letters to the editor.