Literature DB >> 8490080

An open trial of long-term therapy with lansoprazole in patients with peptic ulceration resistant to extended high-dose ranitidine treatment.

G Brunner1, R Arnold, U Hennig, W Fuchs.   

Abstract

Forty-two patients with peptic ulceration of the duodenum, stomach or oesophagus, who had not responded to 3 or more months of high-dose treatment with ranitidine (450 or 600 mg/day), were treated with oral lansoprazole at 30-60 mg daily. In 40 patients (95.2%) the ulcers healed within 2-12 weeks. In the remaining 2 patients healing took several months but eventually all ulcers healed. After healing, 40 patients underwent long-term maintenance treatment with 30-60 mg lansoprazole daily for 1-3 years (continuing). During maintenance therapy with lansoprazole, no endoscopically verified relapses occurred when the drug was taken regularly. In 1 patient treatment had to be discontinued because of a drug-related colitis that disappeared soon after treatment had been stopped. There were no significant changes in routine laboratory tests in any patient. Basal serum gastrin concentrations, which were already elevated by the previous high-dose ranitidine treatment (125 +/- 25 pg/ml), rose to four times the normal values after 4 weeks of treatment with lansoprazole (255 +/- 65 pg/ml). Thereafter no further increases in basal serum gastrin concentrations were observed, even after 3 years of administration. The volume density of argyrophilic cells in the oxyntic mucosa increased slightly during lansoprazole treatment; until now no dysplasia of the enterochromaffin-like cells has been observed. In conclusion, 30-60 mg lansoprazole daily healed ranitidine-resistant peptic ulcers, and subsequent maintenance therapy with 30-60 mg lansoprazole daily was found to be highly effective and safe over the time observed.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8490080     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2036.1993.tb00589.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aliment Pharmacol Ther        ISSN: 0269-2813            Impact factor:   8.171


  6 in total

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2.  Double-blind comparison of lansoprazole 15 mg, lansoprazole 30 mg, and placebo in the maintenance of healed gastric ulcer.

Authors:  T O Kovacs; D Campbell; M Haber; P Rose; D E Jennings; J Richter
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Review 5.  Lansoprazole. A reappraisal of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, and its therapeutic efficacy in acid-related disorders.

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Review 6.  Effect of long-term proton pump inhibitor administration on gastric mucosal atrophy: A meta-analysis.

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  6 in total

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