RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Triple therapy is accepted as the treatment of choice for Helicobacter pylori eradication, but there is no consensus on how long the therapy should be maintained in haemodialysis (HD(+)) patients. Our aims in this study were to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the 7-day triple therapy in HD(+) patients. METHOD: Forty-seven HD(+) and 55 HD(-) patients with dyspepsia underwent endoscopy. The prevalence of H. pylori was detected by Giemsa stain, followed by the urea breath test (UBT). H. pylori(+) patients were scheduled to undergo 7-day triple therapy and the success of eradication was investigated by UBT. RESULTS: Forty-five (44%) patients were positive for H. pylori. Forty of them underwent triple therapy and 39 (98%) patients completed the treatment. Eradication was successful in 32 (82%) and unsuccessful in 7 (18%) patients. There was no significant difference between these groups in age, gender, endoscopic findings or HD, and only previous treatment was significant for eradication failure by univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis. Side effects were observed in 2 (15%) of 13 HD(+) and 3 (11%) of 27 HD(-) patients, and one HD(-) patient had to stop medication because of severe nausea and vomiting. The eradication rate was 93% (28/30) in patients without previous treatment. The triple therapy was unsuccessful in 7 patients, and 4 of them again underwent 7-day triple therapy, but all resulted in failure. CONCLUSIONS: Seven-day triple therapy is safe and effective for primary treatment of H. pylori infection in both HD(+) and HD(-) patients, but a new treatment is necessary for patients with previous treatment.