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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
While the medical community has accepted the role of H. pylori in the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer disease, confusion persists among clinicians regarding when and on which patients to attempt H. pylori eradication. Thus, the objective for outcomes research in H. pylori is to help clinicians identify which patients benefit from H. pylori eradication and to determine the cost-effective strategies for their diagnosis, treatment and follow-up care. Economic evaluation of the impact of H. pylori infection has focused primarily on assessment of patient with documented peptic ulcer disease, with particular attention to costs of pharmaceuticals. However, drug costs are only one portion of the total costs of management for patients with acid-related disorders and therefore must be put in the appropriate context. Additional aspects of patient benefit (e.g. patient satisfaction) and health-care expenditures (e.g. over-the-counter medications, specialist visits, hospitalizations) must be included in an evaluation of the value of a particular diagnostic test, treatment, clinical guideline or disease management strategy. As a result of the high quality and quantity of data emerging, it can be safely said that H. pylori eradication is cost-effective in selected patient populations: newly documented peptic ulcer disease; history of peptic ulcer disease and taking maintenance therapy; and suspected peptic ulcer disease using a serological test to guide initial treatment. The role of eradication in other areas, for example, patients with non-ulcer
dyspepsia
and screening to prevent
gastric cancer
, remains to be seen. In addition to the performance of rigorous studies, researchers must respond to the 'information overload' on busy clinicians, by effectively disseminating their findings. If data generated from outcomes research are not integrated into everyday clinical practice, the enormous benefits associated with H. pylori eradication will not be achieved.
...
PMID:Outcomes research in Helicobacter pylori infection. 914 95
The discovery of Helicobacter pylori has opened new opportunities in the management of gastrointestinal disorders, with the cure of chronic ulcer disease now being possible for the first time. The 1994 United States National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference recommended that patients with duodenal or gastric ulcers unrelated to the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) should be given eradication therapy. These guidelines were refined at a conference held recently in Maastricht. The updated guidelines strongly recommend treatment in patients with duodenal or gastric ulcer disease, low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) gastric lymphoma, gastritis with severe macro- or microscopic changes and after resection of early
gastric cancer
. Despite a lack of hard scientific evidence, the guidelines also suggest that eradication treatment is advisable in patients with unequivocally diagnosed functional
dyspepsia
, a family history of
gastric cancer
, long-term treatment with proton-pump inhibitors for gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD), planned or existing NSAID treatment, after gastric surgery for ulcer or cancer, or if the patient wants to be treated. Many different therapeutic regimens have been used previously, but at present the best treatment is proton-pump inhibitor-based triple therapy, comprising a proton-pump inhibitor plus two drugs out of clarithromycin, a nitroimidazole and amoxycillin. One-week low-dose triple therapy cures 85-95% of infected patients.
...
PMID:Management of Helicobacter pylori-related disorders. 2249 2
Gastric carcinogenesis has been studied in various aspects. Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection and mutation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene have recently been argued to be important factors of gastric carcinogenesis. There have been many studies to determine the precise mechanism of how Hp is related to
gastric cancer
, but it is so far still unknown. We studied the relationship of Hp infection and p53 overexpression and tried to discover some significance in clinicopathologic factors such as age, sex, stage, site, differentiation and gross morphology. Ninety-six patients who were diagnosed with
gastric cancer
at Severance Hospital, Yonsei University Medical College from November 1995 to March 1996, and 96 control patients of non-ulcer
dyspepsia
(NUD) were studied by endoscopic biopsy of normal gastric tissue and cancer tissue. They also underwent the CLO (Delta West, Melbourne, Western Australia) test for Hp positivity and p53 immunohistochemical stain for p53 positivity. These data were analyzed for comparison with the clinicopathologic characteristics of gastric cancers. In conclusion, the differentiated group cancer had a significantly high Hp positivity and p53 positivity. There is a possibility that Hp infection and p53 tumor suppressor gene mutation might be significantly related in the gastric carcinogenic process of well- and moderately-differentiated adenocarcinomas, but further study is necessary to determine more direct clues on the carcinogenic roles of these factors.
...
PMID:P53 overexpression in gastric adenocarcinoma with Helicobacter pylori infection. 917 90
The present review outlines current management issues and controversies related to Helicobacter pylori infection. Clearance of this infection markedly reduces the likelihood of duodenal and gastric ulcer recurrence and may result in the regression of low grade primary gastric lymphoma. Recent therapeutic advances have seen the development of simpler drug regimens to treat H. pylori that have fewer side effects and are shorter in duration. Clearance of the infection can be achieved in 80-95% of patients treated, depending on the drug regimen used, compliance with medications and antibiotic sensitivity. In developed nations reinfection is uncommon after successful treatment. Data do not currently support treatment of this infection for non-ulcer
dyspepsia
or for the prevention of
gastric cancer
, although whether certain individuals or populations may benefit from such treatment remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Review: Helicobacter pylori. Current issues and new directions. 919 97
In this review Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection and its relation to different diseases is presented. H. pylori doesn't cause inconvenience to most infected people, though all infected persons have chronic active gastritis. The 10 year risk of peptic ulcer for people infected with H. pylori is about 10%. Randomized double-blinded trials have shown that eradication of H. pylori can cure most patients with peptic ulcer disease. Some people infected with H. pylori develop atrophic gastritis which is a risk factor for development of
gastric cancer
. It is not known if H. pylori screening and eradication would have a prophylactic effect against
gastric cancer
. It is also unknown if persons with non-organic
dyspepsia
and persons in long-term treatment with proton-pump-inhibitors would benefit from H. pylori eradication.
...
PMID:[Helicobacter pylori in 1997]. 921 51
Occurrence and significance of Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection in patients having undergone partial and total gastric resection was studied. Forty-nine patients after gastric resection with Billroth I and II operation (28 patients due to ulcer and 21 patients due to
gastric cancer
), and 8 patients with total gastrectomy due to
gastric cancer
were selected. In addition, 40 patients with active peptic ulcer disease, 32 patients suffering from
gastric cancer
, and 28 patients with non-ulcer
dyspepsia
as a control group were enrolled. Occurrence of Hp in patients having been operated on due to ulcer disease was slightly lower than in controls (50% vs. 54%), but it was significantly lower than in patients with active peptic ulcer (50% vs. 85%, p < 0.001). On the other hand, in patients who were operated on due to
gastric cancer
, Hp was much less frequent than in the control group, as well as in patients in the preoperative period (9.5% vs. 54% and 72%, p < 0.001). As a conclusion, since in our series colonization with Hp was found to be less frequent after gastric resection than before surgery, its aetiologic significance in postoperative chronic gastritis and ulceration seems to be unlikely. Therefore, the routine postoperative eradication of Hp appears to be unnecessary in such patients.
...
PMID:Occurrence and significance of Helicobacter pylori infection after gastric surgery. 926 15
The publication of the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference guidelines on management of Helicobacter pylori infection in 1994 set a precedence. At present, at least eight European countries have produced national guidelines, and, more recently, the European Helicobacter pylori Study Group also outlined guidelines based on the strength of available evidence. It is generally agreed that H. pylori should be eradicated in peptic ulcer disease. In nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID)-related ulcers, most countries that considered the issue suggested discontinuing NSAIDs when possible and eradicating H. pylori. The prophylactic eradication of H. pylori was not recommended. A number of panels felt that there was not enough evidence available to recommend eradication of H. pylori in functional
dyspepsia
, whereas other groups felt that nonulcer
dyspepsia
, particularly after investigation and with severe or recurrent symptoms, was an indication for eradication therapy. Other conditions (i.e., gastroesophageal reflux disease [GERD] and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue [MALT] lymphoma) have emerged in this short time as possible indications for H. pylori eradication. There is no evidence that H. pylori infection has a role in the pathogenesis of GERD, but there is evidence suggesting that patients with H. pylori infection who require long-term acid suppression may be at risk of developing atrophic gastritis. The European Helicobacter pylori Study Group has suggested that eradication therapy should be offered to infected family members of patients with
gastric cancer
. It also recommended that eradication therapy was "strongly recommended" on the basis of "supportive" evidence in gastritis with severe abnormalities and after early resection of early
gastric cancer
. An "uncertain" recommendation with "equivocal" evidence was given for asymptomatic subjects, extra-alimentary tract disease, the prevention of
gastric cancer
in the absence of risk factors, and in pediatric patients with recurrent abdominal pain. Despite considerable advances, further research studies are needed to provide definite direction for the treatment of many conditions.
...
PMID:Who should be treated for Helicobacter pylori infection? A review of consensus conferences and guidelines. 939 69
Evidence-based medicine combines clinical expertise and the best available evidence from systematic research to aid decision making in patient care. Levels of evidence can be graded from I to V, with level I, the strongest, coming from large randomized controlled trials (RCTs). When a definitive RCT has not been performed, or is impracticable or inappropriate, lesser grades of evidence are used. There is level I evidence supporting the treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection in patients with duodenal or gastric ulcers. Prospective RCTs have shown that cure of the infection is associated with ultimate cure of the ulcer diathesis. Therefore, this is a "grade A" recommendation for treatment. In nonulcer
dyspepsia
, numerous RCTs have yielded conflicting results regarding the benefits of treatment. Although there are methodological problems with many reported studies, there is some evidence (level II at best) to support treatment--a grade B recommendation. In early
gastric cancer
and gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma, the best available evidence supporting treatment of H. pylori infection is of low quality, i.e., levels III and V. Although these carry only grade C treatment recommendations, treatment is safe and carries at least some evidence of efficacy. It is therefore indicated based on the current best available evidence. No evidence exists to support treating the infection in patients receiving long-term proton pump inhibitors for gastroesophageal reflux disease or in patients with any of the nongastrointestinal conditions that have been tentatively linked to H. pylori.
...
PMID:For what conditions is there evidence-based justification for treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection? 939 70
A variety of questions regarding Helicobacter pylori need to be addressed by future research. Further investigations are needed on the relationship between H. pylori and
gastric cancer
. In particular, the mechanism of the interaction between H. pylori infection and host genetic factors and dietary factors that lead to the cancer need to be unraveled. Also, the reversibility of cancer-associated abnormalities (e.g., hypochlorhydria, atrophy, and intestinal metaplasia) by eradication of H. pylori needs to be determined. Noninvasive means of identifying H. pylori-positive subjects at high risk of developing
gastric cancer
are required for such subjects to be targeted for eradication therapy. Further studies are also required on the interactions between H. pylori and proton pump inhibitor therapy that might predispose to cancer. There is considerable interest in the possibility of noninvasive H. pylori testing replacing endoscopy in determining management of nonelderly patients with uncomplicated
dyspepsia
unassociated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Randomized studies comparing endoscopy vs. noninvasive H. pylori testing in this situation are required with comprehensive outcome measures. Improvement in eradication therapy is required and will depend on the development of more effective and specific antibiotics and therapeutic vaccines. Wide-scale elimination of the infection will depend on preventing its spread from person to person. Achieving this will require further knowledge of its mode of transmission, particularly in childhood, and the development of prophylactic vaccines. Further studies are required to define the role of H. pylori infection in other diseases, including predisposition to enteric infection in the developing world as a result of H. pylori-induced chronic hypochlorhydria, nonulcer
dyspepsia
, pernicious anemia, atherosclerosis, and NSAID-related ulcer disease. Finally, we need to know whether H. pylori infection may be beneficial in certain circumstances and whether eradicating the infection may be disadvantageous to some subjects.
...
PMID:What remaining questions regarding Helicobacter pylori and associated diseases should be addressed by future research? View from Europe. 939 79
Several areas regarding Helicobacter pylori that need improvement or clarification in the United States include treatment of
dyspepsia
, physician education on disease associations with H. pylori, and evidence from U.S. studies that 7-day H. pylori eradication regimens are more effective than current regimens.
Dyspepsia
, a ubiquitous condition in the United States, is routinely managed on the basis of a positive H. pylori serology without other investigations. This approach has been fostered by cost-effectiveness studies of various approaches to duodenal ulcer and dyspeptic patients. Serology-directed therapy was the most cost-effective option vs. endoscopy-directed management. The option of not obtaining endoscopy had broad appeal to primary care physicians. In addition, a recent survey suggests that even gastroenterologists routinely attempt H. pylori eradication in infected patients with nonulcer
dyspepsia
, despite a number of negative efficacy studies. Finally, the option of not eradicating a World Health Organization-defined carcinogen in the litigious United States is unappealing to clinicians. Eradication of H. pylori in patients with
dyspepsia
despite more negative trials is likely to continue. There is evidence that U.S. physician awareness of the H. pylori-disease associations and the best therapies are improving rapidly, but further improvement is needed. Discrepancy of awareness of H. pylori between gastroenterologists and family physicians exists. In a recent survey, 94% and 72% of gastroenterologists regarded H. pylori as a causative agent in duodenal and gastric ulcer, respectively, vs. 68% and 68% of family physicians, and only 9% of family physicians believed there was a definite relationship between H. pylori infection and
gastric cancer
vs. 21% of gastroenterologists. One hundred three different H. pylori regimens were being used; 31% of family physicians and 11% of gastroenterologists used ineffective regimens or regimens of unknown effectiveness. Although 1-week proton pump inhibitor triple therapy is promising, there is skepticism that U.S. studies will yield the optimistic results that have characterized the European studies. Unlike in Europe, the U.S. standard is to use double diagnostics to prove eradication rather than just the urea breath test and to use intent-to-treat rather than assessable patient analyses. Both approaches reduce apparent eradication rates.
...
PMID:What remaining questions regarding Helicobacter pylori and associated diseases should be addressed by future research? View from North America. 939 80
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