Author:
Kahrilas Peter,Anastasiou Foteini,Bredenoord Albert J.,El Serag Hashem B.,Labenz Joachim,Mendive Juan,Savarino Edoardo V.,Sifrim Daniel,Udrescu Mihaela,Yadlapati Rena,Hungin A. Pali
Abstract
<b><i>Background:</i></b> Despite deprescribing initiatives to curb overutilization of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), achieving meaningful reductions in PPI use is proving a challenge. <b><i>Summary:</i></b> An international group of primary care doctors and gastroenterologists examined the literature surrounding PPI use and use-reduction to clarify: (i) what constitutes rational PPI prescribing; (ii) when and in whom PPI use-reduction should be attempted; and (iii) what strategies to use when attempting PPI use-reduction. <b><i>Key Messages:</i></b> Before starting a PPI for reflux-like symptoms, patients should be educated on potential causes and alternative approaches including dietary and lifestyle modification, weight loss, and relaxation strategies. When commencing a PPI, patients should understand the reason for treatment, planned duration, and review date. PPI use at hospital discharge should not be continued without a recognized indication for long-term treatment. Long-term PPI therapy should be reviewed at least annually. PPI use-reduction should be based on the lack of a rational indication for long-term PPI use, not concern for PPI-associated adverse events. PPI use-reduction strategies involving switching to on-demand PPI or dose tapering, with rescue therapy for rebound symptoms, are more likely to succeed than abrupt cessation.
Cited by
1 articles.
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