C. Calabrese et al., Pantoprazole, azithromycin and tinidazole: short duration triple therapy for eradication of Helicobacter pylori infection, ALIM PHARM, 14(12), 2000, pp. 1613-1617
Background: Azithromycin is an acid-stable macrolide that achieves remarkab
ly high concentrations in gastric tissue, persisting above the MIC90 for He
licobacter pylori over a period of 5-days, after a single 500 mg oral dose.
Aim: To evaluate and compare the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of two
eradicating regimens of pantoprazole, azithromycin and tinidazole.
Methods: A total of 100 consecutive symptomatic H. pylori-positive patients
received pantoprazole 40 mg b.d. for 1 week, and were randomly assigned to
either azithromycin 500 mg o.m. and tinidazole 500 mg b.d. during the firs
t 3 days (early group, n=50) or during the last 3 days of therapy with pant
oprazole (late group, n=50). H. pylori status was assessed by histology and
rapid urease test at entry and by histology and C-13-urea breath test 1 mo
nth after the end of the therapy.
Results: Ninety-nine patients completed the study. H. pylori was eradicated
in 86% of patients in the early group (intention-to-treat 86%) and in 88%
of patients in the late group (intention-to-treat 88%).
Conclusions: This short triple therapy is effective for H. pylori eradicati
on. The compliance was excellent and side- effects negligible. Moreover, th
e pantoprazole pre-treatment did not modify the efficacy of the therapy.