| Literature DB >> 35343261 |
Vandana Garg1, Prashant Narang2, Ritu Taneja3.
Abstract
Heartburn and acid regurgitation are the typical symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux. Despite the availability of several treatment options, antacids remain the mainstay treatment for gastroesophageal reflux-related symptoms based on their efficacy, safety, and over-the-counter availability. Antacids are generally recommended for adults and children at least 12 years old, and the FDA recommends antacids as the first-line treatment for heartburn in pregnancy. This narrative review summarizes the mechanism, features, and limitations related to different antacid ingredients and techniques available to study the acid neutralization and buffering capacity of antacid formulations. Using supporting clinical evidence for different antacid ingredients, it also discusses the importance of antacids as OTC medicines and first-line therapies for heartburn, particularly in the era of the COVID-19 pandemic, in which reliance on self-care has increased. The review will also assist pharmacists and other healthcare professionals in helping individuals with heartburn to make informed self-care decisions and educating them to ensure that antacids are used in an optimal, safe, and effective manner.Entities:
Keywords: Antacid; acid regurgitation; acid-neutralizing technique; gastrointestinal reflux disease; heartburn; self-care
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35343261 PMCID: PMC8966100 DOI: 10.1177/03000605221086457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.671
Design, intervention (antacid salts), and findings of studies conducted among patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease-related conditions.
| Authors | Study design | Intervention (s) | Treatment protocol | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Johnson and Suralik, 2009
| Randomized, open-label, crossover study | One dose (powder form) of a | – Interventions were provided at visit 2 or alternatively at visit 3 before breakfast– Doses was separated by a washout period of 36 to 48 hours | – Treatment with a sodium bicarbonate and citric acid combination resulted in a statistically significant change in pH from baseline in 6 seconds, compared with 18 seconds for water. |
| Walker | Phase III, randomized study | Immediate-release omeprazole plus | – When required, interventions were provided for a period of 3 days during the 14-day study period | – Immediate-release omeprazole plus sodium bicarbonate provided significant relief of heartburn associated with GERD within 0 to 30 minutes. |
| Orbelo | Open-label, prospective, randomized clinical trial | One sachet in 15 to 30 mL of water per day of an omeprazole and | – The intervention was provided daily for eight weeks either • in the morning, i.e., 20 to 60 minutes prior to a meal or • at night, i.e., immediately prior to sleep | – The once-daily dose, taken in the morning or at night, effectively reversed severe reflux esophagitis and improved GERD symptoms. |
| Higuera-de-la-Tijera, 2018
| Systematic review of studies published since 2000 | Omeprazole and | NRa | – The combination produced a sustained response and sustained total relief in patients with GERD. |
| Sulz | Open, randomized, placebo-controlled trial | Two tablets of a | – Interventions were provided after an overnight fast of at least 10 hours on 3 different days– The scheduled days were separated by a washout period of 4 days | – Both the antacid tablet and gel achieved the target pH (>3.0) during the first 30 minutes. |
| Collings | Single-blind, four-treatment cross-over study | Two pellets of | – Interventions were provided 30 minutes after a meal in all four sessions | – Both gums decreased heartburn for 120 minutes compared with placebo.– The higher gum dose decreased heartburn more strongly than chewable antacids up to 120 minutes.– Antacid gums provided faster and more prolonged symptom relief and pH control than chewable antacids. |
| Rodriguez-Stanley | Prospective clinical study | Two chewable tablets of | NAb | – Calcium carbonate improved the motor function of the esophagus in patients with heartburn, thereby improving acid clearance from the esophagus and into the stomach. |
| Robinson | Randomized, four-way crossover study | Ranitidine (75 mg) versus a chewable | – Interventions were provided 1 hour after a meal– Subjects underwent a 7- to 10-day washout period between each treatment | – The combination was more effective in reducing meal-induced gastric and esophageal acidity as well as heartburn severity. |
| Ohning | Open, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, four-treatment cross-over study | Famotidine (10 mg), | – Subjects consumed a peptone meal both 60 and 15 minutes prior to treatment, and then 2.5 and 6 hours after treatment | – The combination provided superior control of gastric acidity than either antacids or histamine-type-2 receptor antagonists alone. |
| Walsh | Open (observer-blinded), randomized, placebo-controlled four-period crossover design | Famotidine (10 mg), | – Subjects consumed peptone meal both 60 and 15 minutes prior to treatment and then 2.5 and 6 hours after treatment | – The combination reduced gastric acidity more quickly than ranitidine and continued to control gastric acidity for a longer period than calcium carbonate. |
| Robinson | Randomized, crossover, placebo-controlled study | Chewable (750, 1500, or 3000 mg) | – Interventions were provided 60 minutes after dinner– The study period was separated by washout period of at least 24 hours | – The onset of action on esophageal pH was similar for all antacids (30–35 minutes). – Chewable tablets and effervescent bicarbonate had relatively long durations of action (esophagus, 40–45 min; stomach, 100–180 min); conversely, swallowable tablets had little effect. |
| Feldman, 1996
| Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial | Two | – Interventions were provided 60 minutes after the test meal– Two identical meals were consumed 2.5 and 6.0 hours after the medication was given | – The onset of action of calcium carbonate was 30 minutes, versus 90 minutes for famotidine. – The duration of action of calcium carbonate was 60 minutes, versus 540 minutes for famotidine. |
| Netzer | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, four-way crossover study | Two tablets of a | – Interventions were provided after an overnight fast | – The onset of action, for raising pH to >3 was 5.8 minutes for calcium–magnesium carbonate, 64.9 minutes for ranitidine, 70.1 minutes for famotidine, and 240.0 minutes for placebo.– The percentage of time with pH >3.0 was 10.4% for calcium–magnesium carbonate, 61.4% for ranitidine, 56.6% for famotidine, and 1.4% for placebo. |
| Levine | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study | Famotidine (10 mg), | NAb | – Onset of symptom relief was significantly faster with FACT than with FAM ( |
| Decktor | Single-blind, three-way crossover design | Two chewable tablets of an | – Interventions were provided 60 minutes after dinner | – The onset of action was faster with AMH tablets than with calcium carbonate tablets.– The duration of the antacid action of AMH in the esophagus was 82 minutes, versus 60 minutes for calcium carbonate ( |
| Parente | Double-blind randomized, multicenter study | – Interventions were provided for 6 weeks | – Ranitidine proved more effective than aluminum phosphate in reducing the frequency and severity of daytime pain attributable to duodenal ulcer. | |
| Weberg and Berstad, 1989
| Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled,crossover trial | One chewable antacid tablet (containing 1100 mg of | – Interventions were provided four times daily– One tablet each was received 60 minutes after the three main meals and one was given at bedtime.– After 2 weeks of treatment, the patients were switched over to the alternative treatment for another 2 weeks– Treatment periods were not separated by any ‘washout interval’ | – Antacid treatment provided significant lower global symptomatic scores, less acid regurgitation, and fewer days and nights with heartburn. |
| Farup | Double-blind randomized, placebo-controlled,multicenter study | One chewable antacid tablet (containing 1100 mg of | – One antacid tablet each was received 60 min after the three main meals and one was given at bedtime for 8 weeks | – Both antacids and cimetidine significantly reduced symptoms associated with reflux esophagitis compared with placebo. – During the first and second halves of the study, antacid consumption significantly improved the global assessment score versus cimetidine. |
| Graham and Patterson, 1983
| Double-blind, parallel-treatment study | 15-mL doses of | – Interventions were provided seven times daily, i.e., 1 and 3 hours after each meal (three in total) and at bedtime for five weeks | – Both the antacid and placebo significantly reduced the severity and frequency of heartburn. – The time to reproduce heartburn was increased by both antacid and placebo therapy. |
| Meteerattanapipat and Phupong, 2017
| Randomized double-blind controlled trial | 10 mL of alginate-based reflux suppressant (500 mg of sodium alginate, 267 mg of | – Interventions were provided three times after a meal and before bedtime for 2 weeks | – No difference in the improvement of heartburn frequency, 50% reduction of the frequency of heartburn, improvement of heartburn intensity, and 50% reduction of heartburn intensity during pregnancy. |
aNot relevant because the article was a systematic review of different clinical studies.
bThe data were not available in the published article.
Figure 1.Effects of different antacid ingredients on gastric acid. The representative figure presents the mechanism of carbonate salts only. Other antacid salts were discussed in the article. Most of the gastric acid (approximately 45 mEq/h) is secreted across the apical membrane of the stomach through a proton pump (H+/K+ ATPase) after meal consumption. The carbonate salt of antacids binds to H+ ions from gastric hydrochloric acid to produce chloride salts (calcium chloride, sodium chloride, magnesium chloride, and aluminum chloride), carbon dioxide, and water. This decreases H+ concentrations in the stomach, thus raising the pH. The orange region denotes the acidic environment of the stomach, the green region denotes the antacid-mediated neutralization/adsorption of gastric acid, and the yellow region denotes alkalized/neutralized gastric acid. In the alkaline conditions of the small intestine, soluble calcium chloride, sodium chloride, magnesium chloride, and aluminum chloride are converted back to their carbonate salts. The sodium bicarbonate rapidly empties into the small intestine, where it is absorbed; thus, it is considered an absorbable antacid. Calcium carbonate, magnesium carbonate, and aluminum carbonate are excreted with the stool, decreasing their absorption; thus, they are considered non-absorbable antacids.
Features and limitations of different types of antacid salts.
| Saltsa | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium | Sodium | Magnesium | Aluminum | |
| Speciesb | Carbonate | Bicarbonate, citrate | Hydroxide, carbonate, oxide, trisilicate | Hydroxide, carbonate, phosphate, glycinate |
| Category | Non-absorbable | Absorbable | Non-absorbable | Non-absorbable |
| ANC (mEq/15 mL)c | 58 | 17 | 35 | 29 |
| Maximum daily dosage limit (mEq)d | 160 | 200 (≤60 years old) and 100 (>60 years or older) | 50 | NA |
| Limitations | • Constipation and flatulence• Systemic alkalosis and hypercalcemia on long term use• Occasional milk-alkali syndrome in patients taking more than the recommended dose | • Non-serious, stomach/gut irritations that could cause gas or bloating | • Dose-related diarrhea• Flushing• Hypotension• Vasodilation• Hypermagnesemia | • Hypomagnesemia• Hypophosphatemia• Constipation• Anemia |
| FDA category for antacid use in pregnancye | None | None | None | None |
| Contraindications | ||||
| Renal impairment | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Hepatic impairment | No | Yes | No | No |
| Allergy to the antacid ingredient(s) in the formulation | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Others | • Patients with hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and nephrolithiasis• Patients on a low-phosphate diet | • Patients on a sodium- restricted diet, e.g., those with hypertension or congestive heart failure | • Patients with severe diarrhea • Patients with neuromuscular disease such as myasthenia gravis | • Patients with constipation |
aA salt is a chemical compound consisting of an ionic assembly of positively charged cations and negatively charged anions. The specific salts of active pharmaceutical ingredients are often formed to achieve desirable formulation properties.
bChemical species are specific forms of a particular element, such as an atom, molecule, ion, or radical. For example, chloride is an ionic species.
cThe potency of an antacid is generally expressed in terms of its ANC, which is defined as the number of mEq of 1 N HCl that are brought to pH 3.5 in 15 minutes (or 60 minutes in some tests) by a unit dose of the antacid preparation.
dAs per the federal register of the US FDA
eAntacids carry a FDA pregnancy category of None (N), meaning these drugs have not been classified by the FDA.
mEq, milliequivalents; ANC, acid-neutralizing capacity.