A Quasi Experimental Study of Helicobacter Pylori Eradication in Afghanistan: Comparison of Treatment Preferences for Helicobacter Pylori Eradications, Sequential Therapy Versus Hybrid Therapy

Rauf Jan, Sher Alam, None Najeebullah, Mohammad Ashraf Zadran
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 The overarching objective of this study-executed in a quasi-experimental comparative framework at Sheikh Zayed University Teaching Hospital, Khost, Afghanistan-was to discerningly evaluate and contrast two paradigms of treatment: Sequential Therapy and Hybrid Therapy. The subject pool encapsulated a demographically diverse set of individuals, aged 16 to 80, manifesting symptoms of peptic ulcer diseases or gastritis. Those ineligible for inclusion included follow-up patients, immunocompromised subjects, and individuals undergoing oncological interventions.
 Employing the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) Version 25 for data stratification, the Hybrid Therapy arm was subjected to an initial seven-day treatment window with amoxicillin (1g, BID) and omeprazole (20mg, BID), succeeded by a seven-day regimen involving clarithromycin (500mg, BID) and metronidazole (400mg, TID). Conversely, the Sequential Therapy cohort received a bifurcated, five-day course of omeprazole and amoxicillin, followed by an additional five-day regimen of omeprazole, metronidazole, and clarithromycin. Outcome variables, inclusive of treatment efficaciousness, regimen completion, and patient adherence, were rigorously evaluated via Chi-Square statistical testing.
 Encompassing 145 patients, the study observed a gender dispersion of 156 males (41.1%) to 224 females (58.9%). Per-protocol analysis unveiled a statistically significant eradication rate-86.8% vs 83.0% (P=0.021)-tilted in favor of Hybrid Therapy. Both Modified Intention-to-Treat and Intention-to-Treat analyses corroborated this proclivity, registering significant eradication rates of 92.1% versus 67% (P=0.031) for Hybrid Therapy.
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Abstract

Colonization by Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) of the gastric epithelial lining epitomizes a pervasive and clinically consequential infectious etiology. Therapeutic strategies aimed at bacterial eradication inherently hinge on a confluence of determinants-regional antimicrobial resistance spectra, localized clinical algorithms, and pharmaceutical attainability. Best practices in the medical milieu underscore sagacious antibiotic stewardship, predicated on a patient-centric antibiotic historiography prior to therapeutic commencement. The overarching objective of this study-executed in a quasi-experimental comparative framework at Sheikh Zayed University Teaching Hospital, Khost, Afghanistan-was to discerningly evaluate and contrast two paradigms of treatment: Sequential Therapy and Hybrid Therapy. The subject pool encapsulated a demographically diverse set of individuals, aged 16 to 80, manifesting symptoms of peptic ulcer diseases or gastritis. Those ineligible for inclusion included follow-up patients, immunocompromised subjects, and individuals undergoing oncological interventions. Employing the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) Version 25 for data stratification, the Hybrid Therapy arm was subjected to an initial seven-day treatment window with amoxicillin (1g, BID) and omeprazole (20mg, BID), succeeded by a seven-day regimen involving clarithromycin (500mg, BID) and metronidazole (400mg, TID). Conversely, the Sequential Therapy cohort received a bifurcated, five-day course of omeprazole and amoxicillin, followed by an additional five-day regimen of omeprazole, metronidazole, and clarithromycin. Outcome variables, inclusive of treatment efficaciousness, regimen completion, and patient adherence, were rigorously evaluated via Chi-Square statistical testing. Encompassing 145 patients, the study observed a gender dispersion of 156 males (41.1%) to 224 females (58.9%). Per-protocol analysis unveiled a statistically significant eradication rate-86.8% vs 83.0% (P=0.021)-tilted in favor of Hybrid Therapy. Both Modified Intention-to-Treat and Intention-to-Treat analyses corroborated this proclivity, registering significant eradication rates of 92.1% versus 67% (P=0.031) for Hybrid Therapy. Conclusively, Hybrid Therapy demonstrated a superior safety and efficacy profile vis-à-vis Sequential Therapy in extirpating H. pylori, intimating its plausible preferability for the clinical management of associated peptic ulcer diseases and gastritis.
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阿富汗幽门螺杆菌根除的准实验研究:幽门螺杆菌根除的治疗偏好比较,顺序治疗与混合治疗
幽门螺杆菌(h.p ylori)在胃上皮内的定植是一种普遍的、临床结果性的感染病因学。针对细菌根除的治疗策略本质上取决于决定因素的融合-区域抗菌素耐药性谱,局部临床算法和药物可及性。医疗环境中的最佳实践强调明智的抗生素管理,以治疗开始前以患者为中心的抗生素史为基础。 本研究在阿富汗霍斯特市谢赫扎耶德大学教学医院的准实验比较框架下进行,其总体目标是对顺序治疗和混合治疗两种治疗模式进行敏锐的评估和对比。受试者池包含了人口统计学上不同的一组个体,年龄在16至80岁之间,表现出消化性溃疡疾病或胃炎的症状。不符合纳入条件的包括随访患者、免疫功能低下的受试者和接受肿瘤干预的个体。 采用社会科学统计软件包(SPSS)第25版进行数据分层,混合治疗组接受阿莫西林(1g, BID)和奥美拉唑(20mg, BID)的初始7天治疗窗口,然后是克拉霉素(500mg, BID)和甲硝唑(400mg, TID)的7天治疗方案。相反,序贯治疗组接受奥美拉唑和阿莫西林的分五天疗程,随后是奥美拉唑、甲硝唑和克拉霉素的额外五天疗程。结果变量,包括治疗有效性、方案完成度和患者依从性,通过卡方统计检验严格评估。 该研究包括145例患者,观察到性别分布为156例男性(41.1%)和224例女性(58.9%)。按方案分析显示,统计学上显著的根除率为86.8% vs 83.0% (P=0.021),倾向于混合疗法。改良意向治疗和意向治疗分析都证实了这一倾向,记录了显著的根除率92.1%,而混合治疗为67% (P=0.031)。总之,混合疗法在清除幽门螺杆菌方面表现出比-à-vis序贯疗法更优越的安全性和有效性,表明其在相关消化性溃疡疾病和胃炎的临床治疗中似乎更优选。
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