Abstract
Background: Clinical trials provide evidence of the high effectiveness of Helicobacter pylori eradication for preventing recurrent ulcer-related gastrointestinal hemorrhage. The best strategy for curing the infection in this setting is, however, still under debate. Objective: To evaluate four different strategies for prevention of rebleeding in patients with peptic ulcer hemorrhage: 1) test for H. pylori and treatment, if positive; 2) proton pump inhibitor maintenance; 3) no preventive treatment; 4) empirical H. pylori eradication immediately after bleeding. Methods: A decision analysis model was used, with a time horizon of 2 years and a third-party payer perspective. Costs were estimated for two different settings: a low-cost-for-care area (Spain) and a high-cost area (USA). Main outcome measure was incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for each upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage avoided. Results: Empirical H. pylori eradication was the dominant strategy: its estimated rate of recurrent bleeding was lower (6.1%) than those of strategies 1 (7.4%), 2 (11.1%), and 3 (18.4%) and it was the least expensive strategy. The results remained stable when variables were changed inside a wide range of plausible values. Sensitivity analysis also showed that the prevalence of H. pylori in bleeding ulcer was the variable that most influenced the results: when it was below 45% in Spain or below 51% in the United States, empirical eradication was not a dominant strategy although it remained cost-effective. Conclusion: In patients with bleeding peptic ulcer, empirical treatment of H. pylori infection immediately after feeding is restarted is the most cost-effective strategy for preventing recurrent hemorrhage. © 2009, International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR).
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gené, E., Sanchez-Delgado, J., Calvet, X., Gisbert, J. P., & Azagra, R. (2009). What is the best strategy for diagnosis and treatment of helicobacter pylori in the prevention of recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding? A cost-effectiveness analysis. Value in Health, 12(5), 759–762. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1524-4733.2009.00524.x
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.