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Helicobacter pylori eradication for primary prevention of peptic ulcer bleeding in older patients prescribed aspirin in primary care (HEAT): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Helicobacter pylori eradication for primary prevention of peptic ulcer bleeding in older patients prescribed aspirin in primary care (HEAT): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
Helicobacter pylori eradication for primary prevention of peptic ulcer bleeding in older patients prescribed aspirin in primary care (HEAT): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Background: Peptic ulcers in patients receiving aspirin are associated with Helicobacter pylori infection. We aimed to investigate whether H pylori eradication would protect against aspirin-associated ulcer bleeding. Methods: We conducted a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (Helicobacter Eradication Aspirin Trial [HEAT]) at 1208 primary care centres in the UK, using routinely collected clinical data. Eligible patients were aged 60 years or older who were receiving aspirin at a daily dose of 325 mg or less (with four or more 28-day prescriptions in the past year) and had a positive C13 urea breath test for H pylori at screening. Patients receiving ulcerogenic or gastroprotective medication were excluded. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either a combination of oral clarithromycin 500 mg, metronidazole 400 mg, and lansoprazole 30 mg (active eradication), or oral placebo (control), twice daily for 1 week. Participants, their general practitioners and health-care providers, and the research nurses, trial team, adjudication committee, and analysis team were all masked to group allocation throughout the trial. Follow-up was by scrutiny of electronic data in primary and secondary care. The primary outcome was time to hospitalisation or death due to definite or probable peptic ulcer bleeding, and was analysed by Cox proportional hazards methods in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with EudraCT, 2011-003425-96. Findings: Between Sept 14, 2012, and Nov 22, 2017, 30 166 patients had breath testing for H pylori, 5367 had a positive result, and 5352 were randomly assigned to receive active eradication (n=2677) or placebo (n=2675) and were followed up for a median of 5·0 years (IQR 3·9–6·4). Analysis of the primary outcome showed a significant departure from proportional hazards assumptions (p=0·0068), requiring analysis over separate time periods. There was a significant reduction in incidence of the primary outcome in the active eradication group in the first 2·5 years of follow-up compared with the control group (six episodes adjudicated as definite or probable peptic ulcer bleeds, rate 0·92 [95% CI 0·41–2·04] per 1000 person-years vs 17 episodes, rate 2·61 [1·62–4·19] per 1000 person-years; hazard ratio [HR] 0·35 [95% CI 0·14–0·89]; p=0·028). This advantage remained significant after adjusting for the competing risk of death (p=0·028) but was lost with longer follow-up (HR 1·31 [95% CI 0·55–3·11] in the period after the first 2·5 years; p=0·54). Reports of adverse events were actively solicited; taste disturbance was the most common event (787 patients). Interpretation: H pylori eradication protects against aspirin-associated peptic ulcer bleeding, but this might not be sustained in the long term. Funding: National Institute for Health and Care Research Health Technology Assessment.

0140-6736
1597-1606
Hawkey, Chris J.
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Avery, Anthony
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Coupland, Carol
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Crooks, Colin J.
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Dumbleton, Jennifer S.
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Hobbs, F.D. Richard
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Kendrick, Denise
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Moore, Michael
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Morris, Clive
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Rubin, Gregory
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Smith, Murray
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Stevenson, Diane
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Hawkey, Chris J.
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Avery, Anthony
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Coupland, Carol
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Crooks, Colin J.
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Dumbleton, Jennifer S.
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Hobbs, F.D. Richard
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Kendrick, Denise
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Moore, Michael
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Morris, Clive
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Rubin, Gregory
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Smith, Murray
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Stevenson, Diane
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Hawkey, Chris J., Avery, Anthony, Coupland, Carol, Crooks, Colin J., Dumbleton, Jennifer S., Hobbs, F.D. Richard, Kendrick, Denise, Moore, Michael, Morris, Clive, Rubin, Gregory, Smith, Murray and Stevenson, Diane (2022) Helicobacter pylori eradication for primary prevention of peptic ulcer bleeding in older patients prescribed aspirin in primary care (HEAT): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. The Lancet, 400 (10363), 1597-1606. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01843-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Peptic ulcers in patients receiving aspirin are associated with Helicobacter pylori infection. We aimed to investigate whether H pylori eradication would protect against aspirin-associated ulcer bleeding. Methods: We conducted a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (Helicobacter Eradication Aspirin Trial [HEAT]) at 1208 primary care centres in the UK, using routinely collected clinical data. Eligible patients were aged 60 years or older who were receiving aspirin at a daily dose of 325 mg or less (with four or more 28-day prescriptions in the past year) and had a positive C13 urea breath test for H pylori at screening. Patients receiving ulcerogenic or gastroprotective medication were excluded. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either a combination of oral clarithromycin 500 mg, metronidazole 400 mg, and lansoprazole 30 mg (active eradication), or oral placebo (control), twice daily for 1 week. Participants, their general practitioners and health-care providers, and the research nurses, trial team, adjudication committee, and analysis team were all masked to group allocation throughout the trial. Follow-up was by scrutiny of electronic data in primary and secondary care. The primary outcome was time to hospitalisation or death due to definite or probable peptic ulcer bleeding, and was analysed by Cox proportional hazards methods in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with EudraCT, 2011-003425-96. Findings: Between Sept 14, 2012, and Nov 22, 2017, 30 166 patients had breath testing for H pylori, 5367 had a positive result, and 5352 were randomly assigned to receive active eradication (n=2677) or placebo (n=2675) and were followed up for a median of 5·0 years (IQR 3·9–6·4). Analysis of the primary outcome showed a significant departure from proportional hazards assumptions (p=0·0068), requiring analysis over separate time periods. There was a significant reduction in incidence of the primary outcome in the active eradication group in the first 2·5 years of follow-up compared with the control group (six episodes adjudicated as definite or probable peptic ulcer bleeds, rate 0·92 [95% CI 0·41–2·04] per 1000 person-years vs 17 episodes, rate 2·61 [1·62–4·19] per 1000 person-years; hazard ratio [HR] 0·35 [95% CI 0·14–0·89]; p=0·028). This advantage remained significant after adjusting for the competing risk of death (p=0·028) but was lost with longer follow-up (HR 1·31 [95% CI 0·55–3·11] in the period after the first 2·5 years; p=0·54). Reports of adverse events were actively solicited; taste disturbance was the most common event (787 patients). Interpretation: H pylori eradication protects against aspirin-associated peptic ulcer bleeding, but this might not be sustained in the long term. Funding: National Institute for Health and Care Research Health Technology Assessment.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 September 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 November 2022
Published date: 5 November 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: We would like to thank the NIHR HTA Programme for their support for this trial (reference 09/55/52), along with all participating clinical research networks, clinical commissioning groups, and general practices, without whom this trial would not have been possible. We would also like to acknowledge the help and support of TCR Nottingham, those involved in the pilot study, all the research nurses who worked on the trial, and the thousands of patients who participated. Funding Information: This study was conceived by CH and developed with AA, DK, FDRH, MM, and GR, who were collaborators on the preparatory pilot studies, funded by the Medical Research Council. They worked with JD, CACC, and MS to finalise the detailed protocol. CACC and CC did the statistical analysis. JD and DS ran the study and wrote the two methodological papers. CM ran the software for the study within the secure National Health Service N3 network. CACC, CC, and JD had access to and verified the data. CACC and CC did the statistical analysis. CH wrote the first draft of the manuscript with input from CACC, CC, and JD. All authors participated in the interpretation of the data, and critical review of the manuscript. All authors have read and approved the final version of the manuscript and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471230
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471230
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: 69556c08-3011-49d1-bbeb-e97bdb23a673
ORCID for Michael Moore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5127-4509

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Date deposited: 01 Nov 2022 17:33
Last modified: 15 Oct 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Chris J. Hawkey
Author: Anthony Avery
Author: Carol Coupland
Author: Colin J. Crooks
Author: Jennifer S. Dumbleton
Author: F.D. Richard Hobbs
Author: Denise Kendrick
Author: Michael Moore ORCID iD
Author: Clive Morris
Author: Gregory Rubin
Author: Murray Smith
Author: Diane Stevenson

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