作者
Olga P. Nyssen,Ángeles Pérez‐Aísa,Bojan Tepeš,Manuel Castro‐Fernández,Juozas Kupčinskas,Laimas Virginijus Jonaitis,Luís Bujanda,Alfredo J. Lucendo,Natasa Brglez Jurecic,Jorge Pérez-Lasala,Oleg Shvets,Galina Fadeenko,José María Huguet,Zdenki Kikec,Д.С. Бордин,Irina Voynovan,Mārcis Leja,José Carlos Machado,Miguel Areia,Luis Fernández‐Salazar,Luı́s Rodrigo,С. А. Алексеенко,Jesus Barrio,Juan Ortuño,Mónica Perona,Л. Г. Вологжанина,Pilar Mata Romero,O V Zaytsev,Theodore Rokkas,Sotirios D. Georgopoulos,Rinaldo Pellicano,György Miklós Buzás,Inés Modolell,Blas José Gómez Rodríguez,İlkay Şımşek,Cem Şimşek,Marina Roldan Lafuente,Tatiana Ilchishina,Judith Gómez Camarero,Manuel Domínguez‐Cajal,Vassiliki Ntouli,Н. Н. Дехнич,Perminder Phull,Óscar Núñez Martínez,Frode Lerang,Marino Venerito,Frédéric Heluwaert,Ante Tonkić,María Caldas,Ignasi Puig,Françis Mégraud,C O'Morain,Javier P. Gisbert
摘要
INTRODUCTION: The safety of Helicobacter pylori eradication treatments and to what extent adverse events (AEs) influence therapeutic compliance in clinical practice are hardly known. Our aim was to assess the frequency, type, intensity, and duration of AEs, and their impact on compliance, for the most frequently used treatments in the “European Registry on Helicobacter pylori management.” METHODS: Systematic prospective noninterventional registry of the clinical practice of European gastroenterologists (27 countries, 300 investigators) on the management of H. pylori infection in routine clinical practice. All prescribed eradication treatments and their corresponding safety profile were recorded. AEs were classified depending on the intensity of symptoms as mild/moderate/severe and as serious AEs. All data were subject to quality control. RESULTS: The different treatments prescribed to 22,492 patients caused at least 1 AE in 23% of the cases; the classic bismuth-based quadruple therapy was the worst tolerated (37% of AEs). Taste disturbance (7%), diarrhea (7%), nausea (6%), and abdominal pain (3%) were the most frequent AEs. The majority of AEs were mild (57%), 6% were severe, and only 0.08% were serious, with an average duration of 7 days. The treatment compliance rate was 97%. Only 1.3% of the patients discontinued treatment due to AEs. Longer treatment durations were significantly associated with a higher incidence of AEs in standard triple, concomitant, bismuth quadruple, and levofloxacin triple or quadruple therapies. DISCUSSION: Helicobacter pylori eradication treatment frequently induces AEs, although they are usually mild and of limited duration. Their appearance does not interfere significantly with treatment compliance.