Intravenous esomeprazole for prevention of recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding: a randomized trial
- PMID: 19221370
- DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-150-7-200904070-00105
Intravenous esomeprazole for prevention of recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding: a randomized trial
Abstract
Background: Use of proton-pump inhibitors in the management of peptic ulcer bleeding is controversial because discrepant results have been reported in different ethnic groups.
Objective: To determine whether intravenous esomeprazole prevents recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding better than placebo in a multiethnic patient sample.
Design: Randomized trial conducted between October 2005 and December 2007; patients, providers, and researchers were blinded to group assignment.
Setting: 91 hospital emergency departments in 16 countries.
Patients: Patients 18 years or older with peptic ulcer bleeding from a single gastric or duodenal ulcer showing high-risk stigmata.
Intervention: Intravenous esomeprazole bolus, 80 mg, followed by 8-mg/h infusion, over 72 hours or matching placebo, each given after successful endoscopic hemostasis. Intervention was allocated by computer-generated randomization. After infusion, both groups received oral esomeprazole, 40 mg/d, for 27 days.
Measurements: The primary end point was rate of clinically significant recurrent bleeding within 72 hours. Recurrent bleeding within 7 and 30 days, death, surgery, endoscopic re-treatment, blood transfusions, hospitalization, and safety were also assessed.
Results: Of 767 patients randomly assigned, 764 provided data for an intention-to-treat analysis (375 esomeprazole recipients and 389 placebo recipients). Fewer patients receiving intravenous esomeprazole (22 of 375) had recurrent bleeding within 72 hours than those receiving placebo (40 of 389) (5.9% vs. 10.3%; difference, 4.4 percentage points [95% CI, 0.6% to 8.3%]; P = 0.026). The difference in bleeding recurrence remained significant at 7 days and 30 days (P = 0.010). Esomeprazole also reduced endoscopic re-treatment (6.4% vs. 11.6%; difference, 5.2 percentage points [95% CI of difference, 1.1 percentage points to 9.2 percentage points]; P = 0.012), surgery (2.7% vs. 5.4%), and all-cause mortality rates (0.8% vs. 2.1%) more than placebo, although differences for the latter 2 comparisons were not significant. About 10% and 40% of patients in both groups reported serious and nonserious adverse events, respectively.
Limitation: Endoscopic therapy was not completely standardized; some patients received epinephrine injection, thermal coagulation, or hemoclips alone, whereas others received combination therapy, but there were similar proportions with single therapy in each group.
Conclusion: High-dose intravenous esomeprazole given after successful endoscopic therapy to patients with high-risk peptic ulcer bleeding reduced recurrent bleeding at 72 hours and had sustained clinical benefits for up to 30 days.
Primary funding source: AstraZeneca Research and Development.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00251979.
Comment in
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Intravenous esomeprazole for prevention of recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding.Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2009 Oct;11(5):339-41. doi: 10.1007/s11894-009-0065-8. Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2009. PMID: 19765360 No abstract available.
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Missed opportunities in the trial on proton-pump inhibitor therapy in bleeding peptic ulcers.Ann Intern Med. 2009 Oct 20;151(8):588-9; author reply 590. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-151-8-200910200-00020. Ann Intern Med. 2009. PMID: 19841463 No abstract available.
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Missed opportunities in the trial on proton-pump inhibitor therapy in bleeding peptic ulcers.Ann Intern Med. 2009 Oct 20;151(8):589-90; author reply 590. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-151-8-200910200-00022. Ann Intern Med. 2009. PMID: 19841464 No abstract available.
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Missed opportunities in the trial on proton-pump inhibitor therapy in bleeding peptic ulcers.Ann Intern Med. 2009 Oct 20;151(8):589; author reply 590. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-151-8-200910200-00021. Ann Intern Med. 2009. PMID: 19841465 No abstract available.
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