Editorial
Copyright ©2010 Baishideng. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 21, 2010; 16(31): 3865-3870
Published online Aug 21, 2010. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v16.i31.3865
First-line eradication of Helicobacter pylori: Are the standard triple therapies obsolete? A different perspective
György Miklós Buzás
György Miklós Buzás, Department of Gastroenterology, Ferencváros Health Service Non-Profit Ltd., 1095 Budapest, Hungary
Author contributions: Buzás GM was the sole contributor to this paper.
Correspondence to: György Miklós Buzás, MD, PhD, Department of Gastroenterology, Ferencváros Health Service Non-Profit Ltd., 1095 Budapest, Mester utca 45, Hungary. drgybuzas@hotmail.com
Telephone: +361-4-554571  Fax: +361-4-554504
Received: February 23, 2010
Revised: May 29, 2010
Accepted: June 5, 2010
Published online: August 21, 2010
Abstract

Studies concerning the eradication of Helicobacter pylori have resulted in a proliferation of meta-analyses. To date, there are 303 meta-analyses cited in PubMed, 113 dealing with the therapy of the infection. A chronological analysis of the results of meta-analyses performed between 1998 and 2010 shows that first-line standard triple therapies achieved eradication rates on an intention-to-treat basis of around 80%; prolonging treatment to 14, but not 10 d should improve the results. The proton pump inhibitors have a similar efficiency, and giving a double dose is more efficient than the standard doses of these drugs. Triple and quadruple therapies proved to be equivalent. Based on meta-analytical data, the decrease in efficiency over time cannot be substantiated: eradication rates < 80% followed from the introduction of triple therapies. As alternatives, ranitidine bismuth citrate-, levofloxacin- or furazolidone-based therapies were shown to obtain the same eradication rates as standard triple regimens. Sequential therapies and quadruple non-bismuth-based therapies were superior to standard triple therapies but their use is limited to certain countries. In the author’s opinion, and from a meta-analytical viewpoint, standard triple therapies cannot yet be considered obsolete. Furthermore, non-inferiority trials are proposed for the future, including assessment of local contemporary antimicrobial resistance profiles and the CagA and CYP2C19 status of the enrolled patients.

Keywords: Antibiotics; Eradication; Helicobacter pylori; Meta-analysis