summary of interventions for peptic ulcer disease (NICE)
Last reviewed 01/2018
Summary of Interventions for peptic ulcer disease
- H pylori eradication therapy should be offered to people who have tested positive for H pylori and who have peptic ulcer disease
- for people using NSAIDs with diagnosed peptic ulcer, stop the use of NSAIDs where possible. Offer full-dose PPI (table 1) or H2RA therapy for 8 weeks and, if H pylori is present, subsequently offer eradication therapy
- if peptic ulcer (gastric or duodenal) and H pylori then offer retesting for H pylori 6 to 8 weeks after beginning treatment, depending on the size of the lesion
- full-dose PPI (table 1) or H2RA therapy for 4 to 8 weeks should be offered to people who have tested negative for H pylori who are not taking NSAIDs
- for people continuing to take NSAIDs after a peptic ulcer has healed, discuss the potential harm from NSAID treatment. Review the need for NSAID use regularly (at least every 6 months) and offer a trial of use on a limited, 'as required' basis. The clinician should consider reducing the dose, substituting an NSAID with paracetamol, or using an alternative analgesic or low-dose ibuprofen (1.2 g daily)
- if a person at high risk (previous ulceration) and for whom NSAID continuation is necessary, offer gastric protection or consider substitution with a cyclooxygenase (COX)-2-selective NSAID
- if unhealed ulcer then
- exclude non-adherence, malignancy, failure to detect H pylori, inadvertent NSAID use, other ulcer-inducing medication and rare causes such as Zollinger-Ellison syndrome or Crohn's disease
- if symptoms recur after initial treatment, offer a PPI to be taken at the lowest dose possible to control symptoms. Discuss using the treatment on an 'as required' basis with people to manage their own symptoms
Table 1: PPI doses
PPI | Full/Standard dose | Low dose (on demand dose) | Double dose |
Esomeprazole | 20 mg* once a day | Not available | 40 mg*** once a day |
Lansoprazole | 30mg once a day | 15mg per day | 30 mg** twice a day |
Omeprazole | 20 mg once a day | 10mg* per day | 40 mg once a day |
Pantoprazole | 40 mg once a day | 20mg per day | 40mg twice a day |
Rabeprazole | 20mg once a day | 10mg per day | 20mg twice a day |
* lower than the licensed starting dose for esomeprazole in GORD, which is 40 mg, but considered to be dose-equivalent to other PPIs. When undertaking meta-analysis of doserelated effects, NICE classed esomeprazole 20 mg as a full-dose equivalent to omeprazole 20 mg.
**off-label dose for GORD
***40 mg is recommended as a double dose of esomeprazole because the 20-mg dose is considered equivalent to omeprazole 20 mg.
Reference:
NICE guidance - management of new episode of dyspepsia in primary care
H pylori eradication therapy (NICE)
PPI dose in the treatment of peptic ulcer disease (NICE)
NICE guidance - management of duodenal ulcer (DU) in primary care
NICE guidance - management of gastric ulcer (GU) in primary care