| Literature DB >> 30378711 |
Stanley L Marks1, Peter H Kook2, Mark G Papich3, M K Tolbert4, Michael D Willard4.
Abstract
The gastrointestinal (GI) mucosal barrier is continuously exposed to noxious toxins, reactive oxygen species, microbes, and drugs, leading to the development of inflammatory, erosive, and ultimately ulcerative lesions. This report offers a consensus opinion on the rational administration of GI protectants to dogs and cats, with an emphasis on proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), histamine type-2 receptor antagonists (H2 RAs), misoprostol, and sucralfate. These medications decrease gastric acidity or promote mucosal protective mechanisms, transforming the management of dyspepsia, peptic ulceration, and gastroesophageal reflux disease. In contrast to guidelines that have been established in people for the optimal treatment of gastroduodenal ulcers and gastroesophageal reflux disease, effective clinical dosages of antisecretory drugs have not been well established in the dog and cat to date. Similar to the situation in human medicine, practice of inappropriate prescription of acid suppressants is also commonplace in veterinary medicine. This report challenges the dogma and clinical practice of administering GI protectants for the routine management of gastritis, pancreatitis, hepatic disease, and renal disease in dogs and cats lacking additional risk factors for ulceration or concerns for GI bleeding. Judicious use of acid suppressants is warranted considering recent studies that have documented adverse effects of long-term supplementation of PPIs in people and animals.Entities:
Keywords: acid; canine; feline; gastroesophageal reflux; histamine type-2 receptor antagonist; misoprostol; proton pump inhibitor; sucralfate; ulcer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30378711 PMCID: PMC6271318 DOI: 10.1111/jvim.15337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Intern Med ISSN: 0891-6640 Impact factor: 3.333
Published studies on the effect of misoprostol on dogs and cats treated with nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), corticosteroids, or
| Author | Species | Type of study ( | Dose of MIS | Aggressor agent and dose | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arvidsson | Cat | Experimental | 5 μg/kg/h IV | Live | |
| Arvidsson | The relationship between this abstract and the experimental study listed above is uncertain. Hence, the data are not listed. | ||||
| Holroyde | Dog | Experimental | 1, 5, and 10 μg/kg PO given before each dose of ACA | ACA (65 mg/kg 4X in 24 hours) | MIS reduced gastric mucosa injury as determined endoscopically |
| Johnson | Dog | Experimental | 3 μg/kg PO q8h | ACA (35 mg/kg q8h) | MIS reduced gastric mucosal injury as determined endoscopically |
| Bowersox | Dog | Experimental | 15 μg/kg PO q8h for 5 days, then 7.5 μg/kg q8h | ACA (35 mg/kg q8h) | MIS eliminated all gastric mucosal injury as determined endoscopically except 1 dog that had 1 petechia |
| Ward | Dog | Experimental | 3 μg/kg PO at either q8h, q12h or q24h | ACA (25 mg/kg q8h) | MIS administered q8h and q12h reduced gastric mucosal injury as determined endoscopically |
| Guannoukas | Dog | Experimental | 8‐20 μg/kg PO q6h | DIC (1 mg/kg IM q24h for 12 days) mucosal injury | MIS alone did not prevent mucosal injury as determined by necropsy; MIS plus VAG reduced gastric |
| Rohrer | Dog | Placebo controlled trial | 4‐6 μg/kg PO q8h | Methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg IV, then 15 mg/kg q6h | MIS did not reduce gastric hemorrhage as determined endoscopically |
| Dogra | Dog | Experimental | 10 μg/kg PO (frequency uncertain) | Dexamethasone 1 mg/kg q12h until have ulcer | MIS administration associated with slowest rate of healing of previously formed steroid‐associated ulcers |
| Murtaugh | Dog | Randomized, double‐blind trial ACA only (8), ACA + MIS (10) | 100 μg/dog PO q8h = 3.1 μg/kg (mean), range 2.3‐5 μg/kg | ACA (25 mg/kg q8h) | MIS reduced gastric mucosal injury as determined endoscopically |
| Hansen | Dog | Randomized clinical trial | 4 μg/kg PO q8h | Methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg IV, ± 2nd dose 15‐30 mg/kg IV | MIS did not reduced GI blood loss as determined by gross examination or stool guiac slide test |
| Neiger | Dog | Randomized clinical trial | 2 μg/kg PO q8h | Dexamethasone 2 mg/kg IV followed by 1 mg/kg and then 0.5 mg/kg | MIS did not reduce gastric mucosal injury as determined endoscopically |
| Satoh | Cat | Experimental | 3 μg/kg PO q12h | ACA (20 mg/cat) | MIS reduced gastric mucosal injury as determined by necropsy examination |
Abbreviations: ACA, aspirin; DIC, diclofenac; IV, intravenous; MIS, misoprostol; PO, per os; VAG, highly selective vagotomy.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) indications for the use of proton pump inhibitors in people compared to lists of questionable indications found in other publications
| Diseases | US FDA | Kelly et al. | Rotman et al. | Reid et al. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duodenal ulcer (ie, peptic ulcer) | X | X | X | X |
| Treatment of | X | X | X | X |
| Esophagitis | X | X | X | |
| GERD | X | X | X | X |
| Gastric ulcers | X | X | X | |
| Drug prophylaxis for NSAID | X | X | X | |
| Hypersecretory (Zollinger‐Ellison) | X | X | ||
| “Heartburn” | X | X | ||
| Functional dyspepsia | X | X | X | |
| Gastritis | X | X | ||
| Barrett's esophagus | X | |||
| Esophageal varices | X | X | ||
| Malignant neoplasm of stomach/esophagus | X | |||
| Hepatic disease | X | |||
| Abdominal pain | X | |||
| Chest pain | X | |||
| Cough | X | |||
| Drug prophylaxis for steroids or antiplatelet drugs | X | |||
| Esophageal perforation | X | |||
| Duodenitis | X | |||
| Gastroparesis | X | |||
| Unspecified hemorrhage of GIT | X | X |
See https://www.cms.gov/Medicare-Medicaid-Coordination/Fraud-Prevention/Medicaid-Integrity-Education/Pharmacy-Education-Materials/Downloads/ppi-adult-dosingchart.pdf.
Results of treatment of Helicobacter spp. in dogs and cats
| Author | Species | Type of study/design ( | Antibacterials used (days) | Acid suppression used | Results | Means of evaluating efficacy (time of testing post treatment) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kubota | Dogs | Uncontrolled experiment | AMO, MET (14) | OME | 6/6 cleared | HIST, RUT, PCR (uncertain) |
| All dogs treated (6) | ||||||
| Simpson | Dogs | Controlled experiment | AMO, MET (14) | FAM | 6/8 cleared at 4 days | HIST, RUT, IMP (4 days) |
| Treated (8), untreated (6) | 0/8 cleared at 29 days | HIST, RUT, IMP (29 days) | ||||
| Mirzaeian | Dogs | Uncontrolled experiment | AMO, CLA (7) | LAN | 20/20 cleared | HIST, RUT (uncertain) |
| All dogs treated (20) | ||||||
| Costa | Dogs | Controlled experiment | AMO, MET (15) | OME | 7/7 cleared | HIST (uncertain) |
| No tx (7), antibiotics (7) garlic oil (7) | ||||||
| Happonen | Dogs | Uncontrolled clinical trial (9) | AMO, MET (10‐14) + BIS | None | 7/9 cleared | HIST (within 84 days) |
| Repeated tx for initial failures | TET (10) | OME | 1/1 cleared | HIST (within 84 days) | ||
| Jergens | Dogs | Uncontrolled clinical trial (3) | AMO, MET, BIS (21) | None | 3/3 cleared | HIST, FISH, PCR (4‐14 weeks) |
| Cats | Uncontrolled clinical trial (2) | AMO, MET, BIS (21) | None | 2/2 cleared | HIST, FISH, PCR (4‐14 weeks) | |
| Leib | Dogs | Randomized clinical trial | AMO, MET, BIS (14) | |||
| Tx with antibiotics (10) | None | 7/10 cleared | HIST (4 weeks) | |||
| Tx with antibiotics + famotidine (14) | FAM | 11/14 cleared | HIST (4 weeks) | |||
| Khoshnegah | Cats | Uncontrolled experiment | AMO, MET, CLA (14) | OME | 13/13 cleared | HIST (uncertain) |
| All cats treated (13) | ||||||
| Perkins | Cats | Controlled experiment | AMO, MET (21) | OME | 6/6 cleared | CUL of mucosa/fluid (2 weeks) |
| Treated (6), untreated (2) | 1/6 cleared | PCR (2 weeks) | ||||
| Neiger | Cats | Controlled clinical trial | ||||
| Untreated (4), Antibiotics‐1 (6) | AZI, BIS, TIN (4) | 4/6 cleared | Urea breath test (10 days) | |||
| Antibiotics‐2 (11) | CLA, MET, BIS (4) | RAN | 11/11 cleared | |||
| Antibiotics‐3 (8) | CLA, MET, BIS (7) | RAN | 8/8 cleared |
Abbreviations: AMO, amoxicillin; AZI, azithromycin; BIS, bismuth subcitrate or subsalicylate; CLA, clarithromycin; CUL, culture; FAM, famotidine; FISH, fluorescent in situ hybridization; HIST, histology of gastric mucosa; IMP, impression smears of gastric mucosa; LAN, lansoprazole; MET, metronidazole; OME, omeprazole; PCR, polymerase chain reaction testing; RAN, ranitidine; RUT, rapid urea testing of gastric mucosa; TET, tetracycline; TIN, tinidazole.