Browsing by Author "Malfertheiner, Peter (36048150200)"
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Publication Empirical rescue treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection in third and subsequent lines: 8-year experience in 2144 patients from the European Registry on H. pylori management (Hp-EuReg)(2023) ;Burgos-Santamaría, Diego (56925490100) ;Nyssen, Olga P (55312072000) ;Gasbarrini, Antonio (58589716200) ;Vaira, Dino (7005199986) ;Pérez-Aisa, Ángeles (8930097800) ;Rodrigo, Luís (7004380789) ;Pellicano, Rinaldo (7005853671) ;Keco-Huerga, Alma (57209480439) ;Pabón-Carrasco, Manuel (57140584100) ;Castro-Fernandez, Manuel (57207836590) ;Boltin, Doron (17134114400) ;Barrio, Jesus (7103018736) ;Phull, Perminder (6701397316) ;Kupcinskas, Juozas (37026298800) ;Jonaitis, Laimas (8947481700) ;Ortiz-Polo, Inmaculada (6507540659) ;Tepes, Bojan (8904989100) ;Lucendo, Alfredo J (55881718200) ;Huguet, José María (7101976696) ;Areia, Miguel (20733380600) ;Jurecic, Natasa Brglez (57199329921) ;Denkovski, Maja (57779140800) ;Bujanda, Luís (57022137500) ;Ramos-San Román, June (58033396700) ;Cuadrado-Lavín, Antonio (55396055900) ;Gomez-Camarero, Judith (24471208000) ;Jiménez Moreno, Manuel Alfonso (55383209900) ;Lanas, Angel (57193907523) ;Martinez-Dominguez, Samuel Jesús (57195574030) ;Alfaro, Enrique (57208133819) ;Marcos-Pinto, Ricardo (53984773600) ;Milivojevic, Vladimir (57192082297) ;Rokkas, Theodore (57195140768) ;Leja, Marcis (57201274512) ;Smith, Sinead (8766496500) ;Tonkić, Ante (56030012800) ;Buzás, György Miklós (8888734900) ;Doulberis, Michael (24490692200) ;Venerito, Marino (13611854500) ;Lerang, Frode (6603009691) ;Bordin, Dmitry S (58709294500) ;Lamy, Vincent (6701405126) ;Capelle, Lisette G (26425020800) ;Marlicz, Wojciech (6602757415) ;Dobru, Daniela (25229743100) ;Gridnyev, Oleksiy (57222321146) ;Puig, Ignasi (55970933500) ;Mégraud, Francis (7101762986) ;O'Morain, Colm (56724304700) ;Gisbert, Javier P (15738414000) ;Alcaide, Noelia (36010342600) ;Velayos, Benito (57205014718) ;Fernández-Salazar, Luis (6701828832) ;Lasala, Jorge Pérez (36004841500) ;Calvet, Xavier (57188671976) ;Gómez Rodríguez, Blas José (6603394259) ;Beales, Ian L.P. (7005539729) ;Domínguez-Cajal, Manuel (57197801990) ;Perona, Mónica (8587862900) ;Georgopoulos, Sotirios (7003934561) ;Compare, Debora (22233578200) ;Bumane, Renate (58493126900) ;Almela, Pedro (6602398782) ;Núñez, Óscar (35966117200) ;Marusic, Marinko (8412441300) ;Botargues Bote, José María (56518134200) ;Tejedor-Tejada, Javier (57202302659) ;Fernandez-Bermejo, Miguel (6602938106) ;Voynovan, Irina (57203219654) ;De La Peña-Negro, Luisa Carmen (57211043318) ;Ortega, Xavier Segarra (57779140700) ;González-Santiago, Jesús M. (36606141200) ;McNamara, Deidre (59159717100) ;Villarroya, Ramon Pajares (59158392100) ;Iyo, Eduardo (57213164711) ;Gómez, Bárbara (57217996386) ;Link, Alexander (26536193400) ;Rosania, Rosa (35485665800) ;Malfertheiner, Peter (36048150200) ;Kahraman, Alisan (24073642700) ;Ghisa, Matteo (57203387789) ;Dekhnich, Natalia Nikolaevna (57201845926) ;Nikolic, Marko (59879365900) ;Alcedo, Javier (6602505595) ;Iragorri, Itxaso Jiménez (58307613400) ;Bermejo, Fernando (56235189800) ;Algaba, Alicia (24484708600) ;Campillo, Ana (23977490900) ;Abdulkhakov, Rustam (6506615710) ;Grigorieva, Ludmila (57480120500) ;Fadeenko, Galina (58671914300) ;Da Silva, Joana Alves (57306133100) ;Alekseenko, Sergey (7005381600) ;Zaytsev, Oleg (57212492445) ;Ilchishina, Tatiana (57203726279) ;Pakhomova, Anna (8851902900) ;Huguet-Malavés, José María (59157887500) ;Amorena, Edurne (18133308600) ;Belousova, Liya Nikolaevna (57203788670) ;Plotnikova, Ekaterina Yuryevna (57193910407) ;Vologzhanina, Liudmila (57202912853) ;Bakanova, Natalia (57479843100) ;Belousova, Liya Nikolaevna (59817023900) ;Stovrag, Tanja Novica (58671915100) ;Nagorni, Ivan (57200249058)Bjelakovic, Milica (14029809600)Objective To evaluate the use, effectiveness and safety of Helicobacter pylori empirical rescue therapy in third and subsequent treatment lines in Europe. Design International, prospective, non-interventional registry of the clinical practice of European gastroenterologists. Data were collected and quality reviewed until October 2021 at Asociación Española de Gastroenterología-Research Electronic Data Capture. All cases with three or more empirical eradication attempts were assessed for effectiveness by modified intention-to-treat and per-protocol analysis. Results Overall, 2144 treatments were included: 1519, 439, 145 and 41 cases from third, fourth, fifth and sixth treatment lines, respectively. Sixty different therapies were used; the 15 most frequently prescribed encompassed >90% of cases. Overall effectiveness remained <90% in all therapies. Optimised treatments achieved a higher eradication rate than non-optimised (78% vs 67%, p<0.0001). From 2017 to 2021, only 44% of treatments other than 10-day single-capsule therapy used high proton-pump inhibitor doses and lasted ≥14 days. Quadruple therapy containing metronidazole, tetracycline and bismuth achieved optimal eradication rates only when prescribed as third-line treatment, either as 10-day single-capsule therapy (87%) or as 14-day traditional therapy with tetracycline hydrochloride (95%). Triple amoxicillin-levofloxacin therapy achieved 90% effectiveness in Eastern Europe only or when optimised. The overall incidence of adverse events was 31%. Conclusion Empirical rescue treatment in third and subsequent lines achieved suboptimal effectiveness in most European regions. Only quadruple bismuth-metronidazole-tetracycline (10-day single-capsule or 14-day traditional scheme) and triple amoxicillin-levofloxacin therapies reached acceptable outcomes in some settings. Compliance with empirical therapy optimisation principles is still poor 5 years after clinical practice guidelines update. Trial registration number NCT02328131. © 2023 Journal. 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Publication European consensus conference on faecal microbiota transplantation in clinical practice(2017) ;Cammarota, Giovanni (7005357674) ;Ianiro, Gianluca (57225085132) ;Tilg, Herbert (7006594877) ;Rajilić-Stojanović, Mirjana (16319789000) ;Kump, Patrizia (55274035000) ;Satokari, Reetta (6603626190) ;Sokol, Harry (14421842400) ;Arkkila, Perttu (55985660700) ;Pintus, Cristina (57193134961) ;Hart, Ailsa (7201706094) ;Segal, Jonathan (57192576013) ;Aloi, Marina (22950164000) ;Masucci, Luca (57209103213) ;Molinaro, Antonio (36155579500) ;Scaldaferri, Franco (8222069100) ;Gasbarrini, Giovanni (35395245000) ;Lopez-Sanroman, Antonio (6603417520) ;Link, Alexander (26536193400) ;De Groot, Pieter (55613587100) ;De Vos, Willem M. (35495729400) ;Högenauer, Christoph (6602627302) ;Malfertheiner, Peter (36048150200) ;Mattila, Eero (23474243900) ;Milosavljević, Tomica (7003788952) ;Nieuwdorp, Max (22433607700) ;Sanguinetti, Maurizio (57209097150) ;Simren, Magnus (6701353227)Gasbarrini, Antonio (58589716200)Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an important therapeutic option for Clostridium difficile infection. Promising findings suggest that FMT may play a role also in the management of other disorders associated with the alteration of gut microbiota. Although the health community is assessing FMT with renewed interest and patients are becoming more aware, there are technical and logistical issues in establishing such a non-standardised treatment into the clinical practice with safety and proper governance. In view of this, an evidence-based recommendation is needed to drive the practical implementation of FMT. In this European Consensus Conference, 28 experts from 10 countries collaborated, in separate working groups and through an evidence-based process, to provide statements on the following key issues: FMT indications; donor selection; preparation of faecal material; clinical management and faecal delivery and basic requirements for implementing an FMT centre. Statements developed by each working group were evaluated and voted by all members, first through an electronic Delphi process, and then in a plenary consensus conference. The recommendations were released according to best available evidence, in order to act as guidance for physicians who plan to implement FMT, aiming at supporting the broad availability of the procedure, discussing other issues relevant to FMT and promoting future clinical research in the area of gut microbiota manipulation. This consensus report strongly recommends the implementation of FMT centres for the treatment of C. difficile infection as well as traces the guidelines of technicality, regulatory, administrative and laboratory requirements. © 2017, BMJ Publishing Group. All rights reserved. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The submucosal cushion does not improve the histologic evaluation of adenomatous colon polyps resected by snare polypectomy(2011) ;Jovanovic, Ivan (7005436430) ;Caro, Carlos (53163154300) ;Neumann, Helmut (23100999100) ;Lux, Anke (26534629900) ;Kuester, Doerthe (8660179200) ;Fry, Lucia C. (7103263994) ;Malfertheiner, Peter (36048150200)Mönkemüller, Klaus (7004857547)Background & Aims: Although the "submucosal cushion" technique or injection-assisted polypectomy (IAP) is often used to resect colon polyps, little is known on the influence of this technique on histologic interpretation. We aimed to evaluate whether the use of a submucosal cushion improves the histologic and margin evaluation of colon polyps. Methods: Consecutive patients undergoing polypectomy with and without IAP were included. An experienced blinded gastrointestinal pathologist evaluated the specimens using standardized criteria. Results: One hundred eleven sessile colon adenomas were analyzed (IAP, n = 65, standard, n = 46). Two-thirds of polyps ranged in size from 10 to 20 mm; the average polyp size was 13.2 mm for IAP and 9.9 mm for standard snare polypectomy (P = .001). The cautery degree, cautery amount, and margin evaluability, did not differ substantially with regard to the resection technique. For polyps ≥10-20 mm, the overall architecture quality was better in polyps resected with standard technique as compared with IAP. Conclusions: The utilization of IAP did not result in a better margin evaluability of the resected polyp. Overall, IAP does not result in a better histologic polyp evaluability. © 2011 AGA Institute. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Therapeutic double-balloon enteroscopy: A binational, three-center experience(2011) ;Jovanovic, Ivan (7005436430) ;Vormbrock, Klaus (6506393153) ;Zimmermann, Lars (12768716100) ;Djuranovic, Srdjan (6506242160) ;Ugljesic, Milenko (6701730451) ;Malfertheiner, Peter (36048150200) ;Fry, Lucia C. (7103263994)Mönkemüller, Klaus (7004857547)Background/Aims: There are few reports focusing on therapeutic small bowel endoscopy. The aim of this study was to analyze the results of therapeutic small bowel endoscopy in a large cohort of patients. Methods: A retrospective study of a prospectively collected database comprising all patients undergoing diagnostic and therapeutic small bowel endoscopy in three centers. Results: A total of 614 double-balloon enteroscopies were performed in 534 patients. The most common pathological findings were angiodysplasias and vascular lesions (n = 98, 18%), mucosal ulcers and erosions (n = 95, 17.8%), polyps and tumors (including patients with familiar polyposis syndrome such as Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, familiar adenomatous polyps syndrome, neurofibromatosis, adenocarcinoma, neuroendocrine tumors and gastrointestinal stromal tumors) (n = 52, 9.7%), and strictures (Crohn's disease, ischemia, tumors) (n = 12, 2.2%). The mean duration of therapeutic small bowel enteroscopy was 67 min (range 30-115) compared to 50 min (range 25-105) for diagnostic procedures (p < 0.05). A therapeutic small bowel endoscopy was performed in 121 patients (22%). Therapeutic procedures included argon plasma coagulation of vascular lesions (n = 73), polypectomy (n = 49), mucosectomy (n = 5), stricture dilation (n = 7), foreign body extraction (n = 7), injection of fibrin glue (n = 10), and clip placement (n = 5). There were a total of 5 complications (0.9%; paralytic ileus, n = 2, pancreatitis, n = 1, bleeding n = 2). No perforations or deaths occurred. Conclusion: Endoscopists performing double-balloon enteroscopy should be trained and prepared to provide therapeutic interventions for small bowel disorders including argon plasma coagulation, injection, hemoclipping, polypectomy, mucosectomy and foreign body extraction. Therapeutic small bowel endoscopy, albeit associated with complications in about 1% of cases, can be considered a relatively safe procedure. Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel.
