Revista Espanola de Enfermedades Digestivas (Sep 2008)

Efecto del tratamiento erradicador para Helicobacter pylori en pacientes con dispepsia funcional Effect to Helicobacter pylori eradication on patients with functional dyspepsia

  • T. de Artaza Varasa,
  • J. Valle Muñoz,
  • M. J. Pérez-Grueso,
  • A. García Vela,
  • R. Martín Escobedo,
  • R. Rodríguez Merlo,
  • R. Cuena Boy,
  • J. M. Carrobles Jiménez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 100, no. 9
pp. 532 – 539

Abstract

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Objetivo: este estudio ha tenido un doble objetivo: por un lado, evaluar el efecto del tratamiento erradicador para Helicobacter pylori en la respuesta sintomática de pacientes diagnosticados de dispepsia funcional y, por otro, determinar si los hallazgos histológicos podían servir como predictor de la efectividad de la terapia. En particular, se trató de averiguar si la presencia de gastritis antral (la que se asocia a la enfermedad ulcerosa péptica) podría predecir una mayor respuesta sintomática al tratamiento erradicador en los pacientes con dispepsia funcional e infección por Helicobacter pylori. Pacientes y métodos: estudio prospectivo, monocéntrico y aleatorizado, que incluyó a 48 pacientes con dispepsia funcional e infección por Helicobacter pylori (27 mujeres y 21 hombres, con edad media de 37 ± 13,5 años). Veintisiete pacientes recibieron el tratamiento erradicador (rabeprazol, claritromicina y amoxicilina durante 10 días, seguido de 20 mg/día de rabeprazol 3 meses) y 21 el tratamiento control (20 mg/día de rabeprazol 3 meses). Los pacientes fueron seguidos durante un año. Todos rellenaron el Cuestionario de calidad de vida asociada a dispepsia, que evalúa cuatro apartados: intensidad de los síntomas habituales, intensidad del dolor de estómago, incapacidad debida al dolor y satisfacción con la salud. Resultados: existió una mejoría significativa (p Objective: this study evaluated Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy in terms of symptomatic response in patients with functional dyspepsia. On the other hand, we analyzed the importance of histologic findings as a predictor of treatment response. In particular, we studied whether antral gastritis (which is associated with peptic ulcer) may predict a greater symptomatic response to Helicobacter pylori eradication in functional dyspepsia. Patients and methods: this prospective, randomized, single-center trial included 48 patients with functional dyspepsia and Helicobacter pylori infection (27 women and 21 men, mean age 37 ± 13.5 years). Twenty-seven patients received a 10-day course of rabeprazole, amoxicillin, and clarithromycin (eradication group), followed by 20 mg of rabeprazole for 3 months. Twenty-one patients received 20 mg of rabeprazole for 3 months (control group). Patients were followed up over a 1-year period. All patients completed the Dyspepsia-Related Health Scale Questionnaire, which studies four dimensions: pain intensity, pain disability, non-pain symptoms, and satisfaction with dyspepsia-related health. Results: there was significant symptomatic improvement (p < 0.002) after 6 and 12 months, which was similar with both treatments. In the multivariate analyses, eradication therapy and less severe symptoms before treatment were the only independent factors. The symptomatic response to Helicobacter pylori eradication after 6 months was significantly greater as compared to control therapy (p = 0.01) in patients with antral gastritis and in the non-pain symptoms dimension of the questionnaire. Conclusions: both treatments proved to be clinically beneficial in patients with functional dyspepsia. We observed a tendency to greater symptomatic benefit with Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy when compared to control treatment in patients with functional dyspepsia and in a population with a high prevalence of his infection. There is a tendency to symptomatic benefit with Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy in patients with antral gastritis.

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