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Esomeprazole 20mgWiki

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Clinical Trial MeSH HPO Drug Gene SNP Protein Mutation


Correlated Drug Terms (1)


Name (Synonyms) Correlation
drug1822 Placebo Wiki 0.06

Correlated MeSH Terms (2)


Name (Synonyms) Correlation
D008103 Liver Cirrhosis, NIH 0.50
D005355 Fibrosis NIH 0.45

Correlated HPO Terms (1)


Name (Synonyms) Correlation
HP:0001395 Hepatic fibrosis HPO 0.50

There is one clinical trial.

Clinical Trials


1 Stop of Proton-pump Inhibitor Treatment in Patients With Liver Cirrhosis - a Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Trial

Proton-pump inhibitors (PPI) are commonly prescribed in an uncritical manner to patients with liver cirrhosis without a clear evidence-based indication. Observational studies suggests that PPI use in cirrhotic patients may be a risk factor for the development of infections, especially spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP). A possible explanation are PPI-associated microbiotic shifts leading to small intestinal bacterial overgrowth with subsequently increased bacterial translocation. Furthermore, PPI therapy in cirrhotic patients may lead to an increased risk for pneumonia and Clostridium difficile-infections. However, the evidence is ambiguous, as other published studies found no evidence for an association of PPI use with an increased risk for SBP or pneumonia. Moreover, an association between episodes of hepatic encephalopathy and PPI use has been reported. Infections and hepatic encephalopathy may often lead to a hospitalization of cirrhotic patients and PPI use at discharge has also been associated to early re-hospitalization. While some studies found an association of PPI and increased mortality in cirrhotic patients, other studies could not observe this association. Thus, some of the current evidence suggests an unfavourable risk profile of PPIs in patients with liver cirrhosis. However, this patient population is considered to be at a high risk of gastrointestinal haemorrhage from peptic ulcers. Importantly, patients with liver cirrhosis have an increased mortality after peptic ulcer bleeding as compared to patients without cirrhosis. Therefore, generous PPI use may also have a yet unproven preventive effect against upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The STOPPIT trial is the first prospective, randomized, controlled, double-blind trial investigating the effect of discontinuation of long-term PPI therapy on hospitalized patients with complicated liver cirrhosis with a pre-existing long-term PPI therapy. Importantly, patients with an evidence-based indication for PPI therapy are excluded from the trial. All study participants (n=476) stop their previous PPI treatment and are then randomized (1:1) to receive either placebo (intervention group) or esomeprazole 20mg/day (control group) for 360 days. The primary hypothesis anticipates a delay of re-hospitalisation and/or death (composite endpoint) in patients who discontinue PPI treatment as compared to patients who continue PPI therapy. Secondary objectives include the assessment of mortality, re-hospitalisation rates, infection rates, rate of acute hepatic decompensation and ACLF, as well as rates of upper and lower gastrointestinal bleeding events in both groups. Impact of prolonged or discontinued PPI therapy on the intestinal microbiota and pharmacoeconomics will be studied as a secondary assessment.

NCT04448028 Liver Cirrhosis Drug: Placebo Drug: Esomeprazole 20mg
MeSH:Liver Cirrhosis Fibrosis
HPO:Cirrhosis Hepatic fibrosis

Primary Outcomes

Measure: Timepoint of first unplanned re-hospitalization or death (whichever occurs first)

Time: Within 12 months (360 days) after randomization

Secondary Outcomes

Measure: Timepoint of death

Time: Within 12 months (360 days) after randomization

Measure: Mortality rate

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Timepoint of first unplanned re-hospitalization

Time: Within 12 months (360 days) after randomization

Measure: Rate of unplanned re-hospitalizations

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Overall infection rate

Time: 360 days after randomization

Description: Infection rates by site of infection (SBP, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, blood stream infection, Clostridium difficile-associated enterocolitis, Norovirus-infection, Sars-CoV-2-infection)

Measure: Infection rates differentiated by site

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Rate of acute decompensation of liver cirrhosis

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Rate of acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF)

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Rate of upper gastrointestinal bleeding events

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Rate of lower gastrointestinal bleeding events

Time: 360 days after randomization

Description: The gut microbiota composition will be analyzed by PCR

Measure: Changes of intestinal microbiota between baseline and day 90

Time: 90 days after randomization

Other Outcomes

Measure: Rate of occurence of the safety endpoint (evidence-based indication for open-label re-therapy with PPIs)

Time: 360 days after randomization

Measure: Rate of any (serious) adverse events

Time: 360 days after randomization


Related HPO nodes (Using clinical trials)