Prevention of Recurrent Ulcer Bleeding in High-risk Aspirin Users Who Are Not Infected With Helicobacter Pylori
NCT ID: NCT01274767
Last Updated: 2017-04-24
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
467 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
1995-01-31
2010-09-30
Brief Summary
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Although co-therapy of aspirin with an acid suppressant reduces the risk of ulcer bleeding, drug compliance may limit its clinical usefulness particularly in patients who are already receiving multiple drugs. The efficacy of enteric-coated aspirin in preventing ulcer complications showed conflicting results. One study found that enteric-coated aspirin increases the risk of ulcer bleeding. A recent study showed that enteric-coated aspirin causes minimal acute gastric injury.
The investigators postulated that among patients without H. pylori infection and a history of ulcer bleeding who continue to use low-dose aspirin, enteric-coated aspirin reduces the long-term risk of ulcer complications to a level that is comparable to that of average-risk aspirin users.
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Detailed Description
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No dose of aspirin is entirely free of risk. Using a daily dose of aspirin as low as 75 mg, the risk of ulcer bleeding doubles that of non-users \[Weil 1995\]. Previous ulcer disease and concurrent major medical illnesses are important risk factors for ulcer bleeding with low-dose aspirin. Among aspirin users, those with previous ulcer disease have a 5-fold increased risk of ulcer bleeding \[Lanas 2000\].
Various strategies have been used to prevent recurrent ulcer bleeding in high-risk aspirin users, such as eradication of Helicobacter pylori, the use of prophylactic anti-ulcer drugs or enteric-coated aspirin. Recently, the investigators have shown that the eradication of H. pylori is comparable to maintenance treatment with omeprazole, a potent acid suppressant, in preventing recurrent ulcer bleeding for high-risk aspirin users \[Chan 2001\]. However, about 50% of aspirin users are not infected with H. pylori.
The optimal strategy to prevent ulcer complications for high-risk aspirin users who are not infected with H. pylori remains undefined. Although co-therapy of aspirin with an acid suppressant reduces the risk of ulcer bleeding, drug compliance may limit its clinical usefulness particularly in patients who are already receiving multiple drugs.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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High risk cohort
Patients having history of endoscopically confirmed ulcer bleeding, need long-term aspirin for cardiovascular or cerebrovascular prophylaxis and have a negative test for H. pylori based on histology
No interventions assigned to this group
Average risk cohort
Patients having no history of endoscopically confirmed ulcer bleeding, need long-term aspirin for cardiovascular or cerebrovascular prophylaxis and have H. pylori positive OR negative
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Need long-term aspirin for cardiovascular or cerebrovascular prophylaxis
3. A negative test for H. pylori based on histology
Patients must fulfill ALL of the following:
1. No history of ulcer bleeding
2. Need long-term aspirin for cardiovascular or cerebrovascular prophylaxis
3. H. pylori positive OR negative
Exclusion Criteria
2. Current or past H. pylori infection
3. Previous acid-reduction gastric surgery
4. Gastric outlet obstruction, erosive esophagitis, gastroesophageal varices
5. Moribund or incurable cancers
Average-risk cohort
1. Concomitant use of anti-ulcer drug, anticoagulant, non-aspirin NSAIDs or steroid
2. Previous acid-reduction gastric surgery
3. Moribund or incurable cancers
4. Previous attempts of H. pylori eradication
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Chinese University of Hong Kong
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Francis KL Chan
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Francis KL CHAN, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Locations
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Prince of Wales Hospital
Hong Kong, , China
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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3NANC
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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