1. IV Spanish Consensus Conference on Helicobacter pylori infection treatment
- Author
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Luis Bujanda, Antonio Cuadrado-Lavín, Xavier Calvet, Manuel Castro-Fernandez, Miguel Montoro, Fernando Bermejo, Fermín Mearin, Fernando Gomollón, Adrian G. McNicholl, J. Ignasi Elizalde, Angel Lanas, Ángeles Pérez-Aisa, Emili Gené, Emilio Pérez-Trallero, Javier Amador, Carlos Martín de Argila, Javier Molina-Infante, and Javier P. Gisbert
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Delphi Technique ,medicine.drug_class ,Chronic gastritis ,Proton-pump inhibitor ,Disease ,Helicobacter Infections ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Recurrence ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Clarithromycin ,medicine ,Humans ,Stomach Ulcer ,Treatment Failure ,Salvage Therapy ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,Probiotics ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,Amoxicillin ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Surgery ,Metronidazole ,Regimen ,Gastritis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Concomitant ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Bismuth ,Algorithms ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Helicobacter pylori infection is very common in the Spanish population and represents the main cause of chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer, and gastric cancer. The last iteration of Spanish consensus guidelines on H. pylori infection was conducted in 2016. Recent changes in therapeutic schemes along with increasing supporting evidence were key for developing the V Spanish Consensus Conference (May 2021). Fourteen experts performed a systematic review of the scientific evidence and developed a series of recommendations that were subjected to an anonymous Delphi process of iterative voting. Scientific evidence and the strength of the recommendation were classified using GRADE guidelines. An eradication therapy, when prescribed empirically, is considered acceptable when it reliably achieves, or preferably surpass, 90% cure rates. Currently, only quadruple therapies (with or without bismuth) and generally lasting 14 days, accomplish this goal in first- and second-line therapies. A non-bismuth quadruple concomitant regimen (proton pump inhibitor, clarithromycin, amoxicillin, and metronidazole) or a quadruple bismuth-based combination (proton pump inhibitor, bismuth, tetracycline, and metronidazole), are recommended as first-line regimens. Rescue therapies after eradication failure and management of H. pylori infection in peptic ulcer disease were also reviewed.
- Published
- 2016