A comparison of five maintenance therapies for reflux esophagitis

S. Vigneri, R. Termini, G. Leandro, S. Badalamenti, M. Pantalena, V. Savarino, F. Di Mario, G. Battaglia, G. S. Mela, A. Pilotto, M. Plebani, G. Davi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background. Patients with reflux esophagitis have a high rate of relapse within one year after therapy is discontinued. Methods. We enrolled 175 adults with endoscopy-confirmed reflux esophagitis in a prospective study comparing five maintenance therapies. All the patients were initially treated with omeprazole (40 mg orally once a day) for four to eight weeks, and healing was confirmed by endoscopy. Participants were then stratified according to their initial grade of esophagitis and randomly assigned to 12 months of treatment with one of the following: cisapride (10 mg three times a day), ranitidine (150 mg three times a day), omeprazole (20 mg per day), ranitidine plus cisapride, or omeprazole plus cisapride. Endoscopy was repeated after 6 and 12 months of treatment; the endoscopists were blinded to the treatment assignments. Remission was defined as the absence of esophageal lesions on scheduled or unscheduled follow-up endoscopy. Results. In an intention-to-treat analysis, the numbers of patients in continued remission at 12 months were 19 of 35 (54 percent) in the cisapride group, 17 of 35 (49 percent) in the ranitidine group, 28 of 35 (80 percent) in the omeprazole group, 23 of 35 (68 percent) in the ranitidine-plus-cisapride group, and 31 of 35 (89 percent) in the omeprazole-plus-cisapride group. Omeprazole was significantly more effective than cisapride (P = 0.02) or ranitidine (P = 0.003), and combination therapy with omeprazole plus cisapride was significantly more effective than cisapride alone (P = 0.003); ranitidine alone (P

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1106-1110
Number of pages5
JournalNew England Journal of Medicine
Volume333
Issue number17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1995

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Medicine(all)

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