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UnknownNCT05449028

Helicobacter Pylori Eradication Therapy in Portugal

Helicobacter Pylori Eradication Therapy in Portugal: Prospective, Randomized, Blind and Multicentre Trial on the Efficacy of Quadruple Therapies and Their Clinical Impact, and Immunological and Gut Microbiota Changes

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
230 (estimated)
Sponsor
Unidade Local de Saúde de Coimbra, EPE · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection remains a major public health problem, with an estimated prevalence of over 50% worldwide and 60-86% for Portugal. H. pylori is associated with significant morbidity and mortality from peptic ulcerative disease to gastric cancer, whose eradication therapy has proven to be effective in preventing these complications. Factors involved in the development of these conditions include H. pylori virulence, host genetic factors and gut microbiota. Given the increasing pattern of antibiotic resistance evidenced by this bacterium and the scarcity of available antibiotic therapy, both in Portugal and worldwide, there is not enough evidence on the best eradication strategy. Regarding the uncertainties about the potential negative impact of indiscriminate use of eradication therapy on gut microbiota, either by proton pump inhibitors or by antibiotics per se, there is an overriding need for evidence about the real impact of this therapy on oral or gut flora and possible clinical consequences in immunological, metabolic, nutritional and oncological terms. Objectives: Comparative evaluation of the efficacy of the different quadruple therapy regimens recommended for the H. pylori eradication. Comparative evaluation of the safety profile in terms of clinical, and immunological and gut microbiota impact of the different therapies for the H. pylori eradication.

Detailed description

Introduction: Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection remains a major public health problem, with an estimated prevalence of over 50% worldwide and 60-86% for Portugal. H. pylori is associated with significant morbidity and mortality from peptic ulcerative disease to gastric cancer, whose eradication therapy has proven to be effective in preventing these complications. Factors involved in the development of these conditions include H. pylori virulence, host genetic factors and gut microbiota. Given the increasing pattern of antibiotic resistance evidenced by this bacterium and the scarcity of available antibiotic therapy, both in Portugal and worldwide, there is not enough evidence on the best eradication strategy. Regarding the uncertainties about the potential negative impact of indiscriminate use of eradication therapy on gut microbiota, either by proton pump inhibitors or by antibiotics per se, there is an overriding need for evidence about the real impact of this therapy on oral or gut flora and possible clinical consequences in immunological, metabolic, nutritional and oncological terms. Objectives: Comparative evaluation of the efficacy of the different quadruple therapy regimens recommended for the H. pylori eradication. Comparative evaluation of the safety profile in terms of clinical, and immunological and gut microbiota impact of the different therapies for the H. pylori eradication. Methods: Prospective longitudinal multicentre study of total of patients with gastric infection by H. pylori, diagnosed by 13C-urea breath test or histological analysis of gastric biopsies and clinical indication for its eradication, referred to the different participating Portuguese hospital units and a blind randomized controlled clinical trial of the efficacy and safety of the different quadruple therapy regimes recommended for the H. pylori eradication. This study will be carried out in 4 phases: Phase 1 - Recruitment and randomization of patients by the different quadruple eradication schemes with and without bismuth (5 parallel arms); Phase 2 - H. pylori eradication with evaluation of the efficacy and safety rates at 1 month and the absence of reinfection at 12 months after treatment and collection of stool samples before and after the eradication therapy for evaluation of changes in gut microbiota; Phase 3 - Analysis of richness, diversity and uniformity of gut microbiota by DNA sequencing using the hypervariable region of the ribosomal 16S bacteria gene as a taxonomic identification marker and their clinical impact on immunology, metabolism and nutrition at 12 months after the H. pylori eradication therapy; and Phase 4 - Analysis of immunological changes through the study of cell populations by flow cytometry (CD4+, CD8+, B-cell, T-cell, natural killer cells, cells ratio) and cytokines, chemokines and growth factors by xMAP/Luminex before and 12 months after the H. pylori eradication therapy. Expected results, impact and scientific outputs: Given the high rate of triple therapy inefficacy, high antibiotic resistance and the scarcity and controversy of existing literature on quadruple regimens, there may be relevant differences in the approved quadruple regimens for the H. pylori eradication, being necessary to define which is the most effective and safe in Portugal, decreasing the rate of ineffectiveness and exposure to multiple antibiotics. The homeostasis of gut microbiota is significantly changed after H. pylori eradication and this modification may be substantially different according to the therapeutic scheme used, with clinical implications on immunology, metabolism and nutrition. Thus, a randomized trial to compare quadruple regimens is need, allowing in the future, an individualized selection of the H. pylori eradication regimen, taking into account the higher efficacy and safety and lower gut dysbiosis and its systemic consequences, in short and long term. Modulating oral and gut microbiota therapies, including prebiotics, probiotics, symbiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation and perhaps targeted-immunotherapy may be beneficial as adjuvant therapy to existing H. pylori eradication regimens, in a systematic way or for some therapeutic regimes or risk groups.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGH. pylori eradication scheme AEsomeprazole 40mg bid + amoxicillin 1g 12/12h + clarithromycin 500mg 12/12h + metronidazole 500mg 8/8h, for 14 days
DRUGH. pylori eradication scheme BEsomeprazole 40mg bid + amoxicillin 1g 12/12h + clarithromycin 500mg 12/12h + metronidazole 500mg 12/12h, for 14 days
DRUGH. pylori eradication scheme CEsomeprazole 40mg bid + bismuth subsalicylate 420mg 6/6h + metronidazole 375mg 6/6h + tetracycline 375mg 6/6h, for 10 days
DRUGH. pylori eradication scheme DEsomeprazole 40mg bid + amoxicillin 1g 12/12h for 7 days, followed by esomeprazole 40mg bid + clarithromycin 500mg 12/12h + metronidazole 500mg 12/12h for 7 days
DRUGH. pylori eradication scheme EEsomeprazole 40mg bid + amoxicillin 1g 12/12h for 7 days, followed by esomeprazole 40mg bid + amoxicillin 1g 12/12h + clarithromycin 500mg 12/12h + metronidazole 500mg 12/12h for 7 days

Timeline

Start date
2022-05-01
Primary completion
2023-12-31
Completion
2024-12-31
First posted
2022-07-08
Last updated
2022-07-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Portugal

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05449028. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.