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In patients with gastroesophageal
reflux disease (GERD) and erosive esophagitis, treatment with proton pump
inhibitors (PPIs) is highly effective. However, in some patients, especially
those with nonerosive reflux disease or atypical GERD symptoms,
acid-suppressive therapy with PPIs is not as successful.
Alginates are medications that
work through an alternative mechanism by displacing the postprandial gastric
acid pocket. This study performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to
examine the benefit of alginate-containing compounds in the treatment of
patients with symptoms of GERD.
PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, and the
Cochrane library electronic databases were searched through October 2015 for
randomized controlled trials comparing alginate-containing compounds to
placebo, antacids, histamine-2 receptor antagonists (H2RAs), or PPIs for the
treatment of GERD symptoms. Additional studies were identified through a
bibliography review. Non-English studies and those with pediatric patients were
excluded.
Meta-analyses were performed
using random-effect models to calculate odds ratios (OR). Heterogeneity between
studies was estimated using the I2 statistic. Analyses were stratified by type
of comparator. The search strategy yielded 665 studies and 15 (2.3%) met
inclusion criteria. Fourteen were included in the meta-analysis (N = 2095
subjects).
Alginate-based therapies increased the odds of resolution of GERD symptoms when compared to placebo or antacids with a moderate degree of heterogeneity between studies. Compared to PPIs or H2RAs, alginates appear less effective but the pooled estimate was not statistically significant.
Alginates are more effective than
placebo or antacids for treating GERD symptoms.
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