Status and phase
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About
Clarithromycin-containing triple therapy is still the primary therapy approved by the Korean government. However, studies of antibiotic resistance have shown that regional resistance patterns to antibiotics such as clarithromycin are increasing. Recent studies show that examining genotype resistance is effective in eradication. Currently, dual priming oligonucleotide-polymerase chain reaction (DPO-PCR) is used to measure clarithromycin resistance. No study has compared the duration of eradication regimens according to DPO-PCR results. This study compares the eradication rate of 7-day triple therapy with 14-day triple therapy in clarithromycin susceptible strains from DPO-PCR. The investigators also aimed to compare the eradication rates of 7-day bismuth quadruple therapy with 14-day bismuth quadruple therapy from clarithromycin-resistant strains from DPO-PCR.
Full description
This is a multi-center study performed at 20 university hospitals. The study is composed of two phases. In phase I, patients with H. pylori infection are randomized to receive tailored or empirical therapy. The empirical therapy group is further randomized to receive either 7-day triple therapy or 14-day triple therapy. The tailored group is randomized to receive triple therapy if they are clarithromycin sensitive or bismuth quadruple therapy if they are clarithromycin resistant. Each group is further randomized to receive either seven or 14 days of treatment. The eradication rates and adverse events of each regimen will be investigated.
In phase 2, patients with H. pylori infection are randomized to receive tailored or empirial therapy. The empirical therapy group receives 14 days of triple therapy. The tailored therapy group receives 7-day triple therapy if they are clarithromycin sensitive and 7-day bismuth quadruple therapy if clarithromycin resistant.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Participants who voluntarily want to participate in this study.
Exclusion criteria
History of H. pylori eradication History of stomach resection. Allergy or adverse events related to eradication medication. Administration of proton-pump inhibitor within 2 weeks or Histamine 2 receptor blocker within 1 week.
Administration of these drugs within a week or who need continuous administration of these drugs; aspirin (except low-dose aspirin for primary prophylaxis of cardiovascular disease), intravenous or oral NSAID, anticholinergics, prostaglandin analogs, pro-motility drugs, sucralfate Administration of antibiotics within 4 weeks. Pregnant, breast feeding participant or who do not have a will to avoid pregnancy during clinical trial Administrating one of these drugs (Lovastatin, Simvastatin, Atorvastatin, Indinavir, Ritonavir, Cyclosporin, Terfenadine, Cisapride, Pimozide, Astemizole, HIV protease inhibitors (Atazanavir, Nelfinavir), Ergotamine, Dihydroergotamine, Mizolastine, Bepridil, Ticagrelor) Infectious mononucleosis Central nervous system infection Hematologic disease Galactose intolerance Lactase deficiency Glucose-galactose malabsorption Torsades de pointes.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,230 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Joon S Kim, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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