Boghossian Taline A, Rashid Farah Joy, Thompson Wade, Welch Vivian, Moayyedi Paul, Rojas-Fernandez Carlos, Pottie Kevin, Farrell Barbara
Department of Pharmacy, The Ottawa Hospital, 501 Smyth Road, Ottawa, ON, Canada, K1H 8L6.
Bruyère Research Institute, University of Ottawa, 43 rue Bruyere St, Room 730D, Ottawa, ON, Canada, K1N 5C8.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Mar 16;3(3):CD011969. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011969.pub2.
Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are a class of medications that reduce acid secretion and are used for treating many conditions such as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), dyspepsia, reflux esophagitis, peptic ulcer disease, and hypersecretory conditions (e.g. Zollinger-Ellison syndrome), and as part of the eradication therapy for Helicobacter pylori bacteria. However, approximately 25% to 70% of people are prescribed a PPI inappropriately. Chronic PPI use without reassessment contributes to polypharmacy and puts people at risk of experiencing drug interactions and adverse events (e.g. Clostridium difficile infection, pneumonia, hypomagnesaemia, and fractures).
To determine the effects (benefits and harms) associated with deprescribing long-term PPI therapy in adults, compared to chronic daily use (28 days or greater).
We searched the following databases: Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; 2016, Issue 10), MEDLINE, Embase, clinicaltrials.gov, and the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (WHO ICTRP). The last date of search was November 2016. We handsearched the reference lists of relevant studies. We screened 2357 articles (2317 identified through search strategy, 40 through other resources). Of these articles, we assessed 89 for eligibility.
We included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-randomized trials comparing at least one deprescribing modality (e.g. stopping PPI or reducing PPI) with a control consisting of no change in continuous daily PPI use in adult chronic users. Outcomes of interest were: change in gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms, drug burden/PPI use, cost/resource use, negative and positive drug withdrawal events, and participant satisfaction.
Two review authors independently reviewed and extracted data and completed the risk of bias assessment. A third review author independently confirmed risk of bias assessment. We used Review Manager 5 software for data analysis. We contacted study authors if there was missing information.
The review included six trials (n = 1758). Trial participants were aged 48 to 57 years, except for one trial that had a mean age of 73 years. All participants were from the outpatient setting and had either nonerosive reflux disease or milder grades of esophagitis (LA grade A or B). Five trials investigated on-demand deprescribing and one trial examined abrupt discontinuation. There was low quality evidence that on-demand use of PPI may increase risk of 'lack of symptom control' compared with continuous PPI use (risk ratio (RR) 1.71, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.31 to 2.21), thereby favoring continuous PPI use (five trials, n = 1653). There was a clinically significant reduction in 'drug burden', measured as PPI pill use per week with on-demand therapy (mean difference (MD) -3.79, 95% CI -4.73 to -2.84), favoring deprescribing based on moderate quality evidence (four trials, n = 1152). There was also low quality evidence that on-demand PPI use may be associated with reduced participant satisfaction compared with continuous PPI use. None of the included studies reported cost/resource use or positive drug withdrawal effects.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: In people with mild GERD, on-demand deprescribing may lead to an increase in GI symptoms (e.g. dyspepsia, regurgitation) and probably a reduction in pill burden. There was a decline in participant satisfaction, although heterogeneity was high. There were insufficient data to make a conclusion regarding long-term benefits and harms of PPI discontinuation, although two trials (one on-demand trial and one abrupt discontinuation trial) reported endoscopic findings in their intervention groups at study end.
质子泵抑制剂(PPIs)是一类可减少胃酸分泌的药物,用于治疗多种病症,如胃食管反流病(GERD)、消化不良、反流性食管炎、消化性溃疡病以及分泌过多性疾病(如卓-艾综合征),并作为根除幽门螺杆菌治疗的一部分。然而,约25%至70%的人被不恰当地开具了质子泵抑制剂。长期使用质子泵抑制剂而不重新评估会导致用药过多,并使人们面临药物相互作用和不良事件(如艰难梭菌感染、肺炎、低镁血症和骨折)的风险。
确定与停用成人长期质子泵抑制剂治疗相比,与长期每日使用(28天或更长时间)相关的效果(益处和危害)。
我们检索了以下数据库:Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL;2016年第10期)、医学期刊数据库(MEDLINE)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)、临床试验注册库(clinicaltrials.gov)以及世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台(WHO ICTRP)。检索的最后日期为2016年11月。我们手工检索了相关研究的参考文献列表。我们筛选了2357篇文章(通过检索策略识别出2317篇,通过其他资源识别出40篇)。在这些文章中,我们评估了89篇的 eligibility。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCTs)和半随机试验,这些试验比较了至少一种减药方式(如停用质子泵抑制剂或减少质子泵抑制剂用量)与连续每日使用质子泵抑制剂无变化的对照组,受试者为成年慢性使用者。感兴趣的结局包括:胃肠道(GI)症状的变化、药物负担/质子泵抑制剂的使用、成本/资源使用、阴性和阳性停药事件以及受试者满意度。
两位综述作者独立审查并提取数据,并完成偏倚风险评估。第三位综述作者独立确认偏倚风险评估。我们使用Review Manager 5软件进行数据分析。如果有缺失信息,我们会联系研究作者。
该综述纳入了六项试验(n = 1758)。试验参与者年龄在48至57岁之间,除了一项试验的平均年龄为73岁。所有参与者均来自门诊,患有非糜烂性反流病或较轻程度的食管炎(洛杉矶分级A或B)。五项试验研究了按需减药,一项试验研究了突然停药。低质量证据表明,与持续使用质子泵抑制剂相比,按需使用质子泵抑制剂可能增加“症状控制不佳”的风险(风险比(RR)1.71,95%置信区间(CI)1.31至2.21),因此支持持续使用质子泵抑制剂(五项试验,n = 1653)。以按需治疗每周使用质子泵抑制剂的片数衡量,“药物负担”有临床显著降低(平均差(MD)-3.79,95%CI -4.73至-2.84),基于中等质量证据支持减药(四项试验,n = 1152)。也有低质量证据表明,与持续使用质子泵抑制剂相比,按需使用质子泵抑制剂可能与受试者满意度降低有关。纳入的研究均未报告成本/资源使用或阳性停药效果。
在轻度胃食管反流病患者中,按需减药可能导致胃肠道症状(如消化不良、反流)增加,可能还会使药片负担减轻。受试者满意度有所下降,尽管异质性较高。关于停用质子泵抑制剂的长期益处和危害,数据不足无法得出结论,尽管两项试验(一项按需试验和一项突然停药试验)在研究结束时报告了其干预组的内镜检查结果。