The American journal of gastroenterology
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Am. J. Gastroenterol. · Sep 2003
Comparative Study Clinical TrialStep-down from multiple- to single-dose proton pump inhibitors (PPIs): a prospective study of patients with heartburn or acid regurgitation completely relieved with PPIs.
Management costs for gastroesophageal reflux disease are high because of the expensive medications used for maintenance therapy. Previous studies have illustrated the success of step-down from proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) to less-expensive therapy once symptoms have abated. This study was conducted to determine whether patients requiring greater than single-dose PPI for initial symptom resolution could be stepped-down to single-dose PPI and whether this intervention decreased costs or adversely affected quality of life. ⋯ The majority of patients rendered asymptomatic on greater than single-dose PPI might be subsequently stepped-down to single-dose therapy without recurrence of reflux-type symptoms. This intervention can decrease management costs without adversely affecting quality of life.
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Am. J. Gastroenterol. · Sep 2003
Predictors of recurrent specialized intestinal metaplasia after complete laser ablation.
The aim of this study was to determine whether specialized intestinal metaplasia recurs after complete laser ablation and to evaluate the persistence of colon epithelial protein in esophageal mucosa after laser ablation as a predictor of recurrence. ⋯ Specialized intestinal epithelium was ablated by neodymium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet laser but recurred in eight of 21 (38%) of patients. Colon epithelial protein was present in all primary (31 of 31) and all recurrent (eight of eight) Barrett's esophagus. Recurrent specialized intestinal metaplasia may be deep to squamous epithelium. Replacement of specialized intestinal mucosa by cardia-type mucosa and persistence of colonic epithelial protein are predictors of recurrent specialized intestinal mucosa before its endoscopic or histological detection. Laser ablation of Barrett's epithelium is an investigational intervention that should be restricted to research protocols.
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The purpose of the study was to estimate the cost-effectiveness of gastric bypass in the treatment of severe obesity (body mass index > 40). A deterministic decision analysis that compared the lifetime expected costs and outcomes between open gastric bypass and no treatment of severe obesity from the payer perspective was performed. Men and women between the ages of 35 and 55 yr, with body mass index between 40 and 50 kg/m(2), who did not have cardiac disease and who failed conservative treatment, including pharmacotherapy, were included. ⋯ Sensitivity analysis demonstrated that in older, less obese men, the cost effectiveness ratio was responsive to the amount of weight lost, obesity-related quality of life, and complication rates. Parameter variation did not significantly affect cost-effectiveness ratios in the remaining patients. The authors concluded that gastric bypass is a cost-effective alternative to no treatment in the severely obese, at less than 50,000 US dollars per QALY.