Table 1.
Parameter | Esomeprazole | Lansoprazole | Pantoprazole | Omeprazole | Omeprazole (independent) | Esomeprazole |
Control group | Placebo | Placebo | Placebo | Dosing range | Placebo | Placebo |
Blinding | Double | Double | Double | Single | Double | Double |
Trial of conservative measures | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes1 | No |
Antacids allowed as rescue | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
Open-label phase to identify PPI responders | Yes (2 wk) | No | Yes (4 wk) | No | No | Yes (2 wk) |
Randomised withdrawal from PPI | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Length of randomised phase (wk) | 4 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 4 | 4 |
Age in months | 1-12 | 1-12 | 1-12 | 0-243 | 3-12 | 1-11 |
n | 40 | 81 | 50 | 35 | 30 | 80 |
GORD symptoms for clinical diagnosis | Vomiting; Regurgitation; Irritability; Supra-oesophageal disturbances; Respiratory Disturbance; Feeding difficulty | Crying; Fussiness; Irritability | Vomiting; Regurgitation; Spitting up; Irritability; Fussiness; Feeding Refusal; Choking; Gagging | Vomiting Regurgitation | 4Frequent spilling Irritability/crying | Vomiting, regurgitation, irritability, cough, wheezing, stridor, labored breathing, resp symptoms triggered by feeding, food refusal, gagging, choking, hiccups for > 1 h/d |
Primary endpoints | Time from randomisation to discontinuation because of symptom worsening perceived by parent or physician on symptom severity scale | Proportion with ≤ 50% reduction in PGA of symptoms | Proportion of infants who withdrew due to the “lack of efficacy” including worsening of symptoms, and/or antacid use for 7 consecutive days and/or oesophagitis and/or physician judgements | Change from baseline in daily symptoms based on PGA and parent perception | Reflux index from baseline | Time from randomization to discontinuation owing to symptom worsening in the double-blind phase |
Primary end point efficacy result | Hazard ratio = 0.69 (PPI/Placebo); 95%CI: 0.35-1.35; P = 0.275 | Responder rate: 54% (44/81) PPI vs 54% (44/81) Placebo; P = 1.000 | Responder rate: 12% PPI vs 11% Placebo; P = 1.000 | Mean daily vomiting/regurgitation episodes decreased by 4.34/d (0.5 mg/kg; 2.97/d – 1.0 mg/kg 4.35/d – 1.5 mg/kg; P > 0.50 in all group comparisons | Change from baseline of parent-recorded 24 h crying and fussing time and visual analogue scores of parental impression of the intensity of irritability Reflux index; -8.9% ± 5.6% PPI; -1.9% ± 2.0% Placebo P < 0.001 Cry/fuss times (min/24 h); 191 ± 120 (PPI); 201 ± 100 (Placebo) P = 0.400 Combined PPI and Placebo groups total cry fuss time2 Baseline vs 2 wk P = 0.040 Baseline vs 4 wk P = 0.008 VA Score 5.0 ± 3.1 (PPI); 5.9 ± 2.1 (Placebo) P = 0.214 | Discontinuation rates owing to symptom worsening were 48.8% (20/41) for placebo-treated vs 38.5% (15/39) for esomeprazole-treated patients (hazard ratio 0.69; P = 0.28) |
Limitations of studies | Small sample size Symptom-based diagnosis Subjective assessment | Small sample size; Symptom-based diagnosis; Subjective assessment | Small sample size Symptom-based diagnosis Subjective assessment | Single blinded; Not placebo-controlled; Small sample size; Symptom-based diagnosis; Subjective assessment | Small sample size; Subjective assessment | Small sample size; Symptom-based diagnosis; Subjective assessment |
All infants were given empirical pharmacologic treatment (excluding PPIs) including cisapride (87%), H2 receptor antagonists (73%), antacid (67%) and thickening agent (20%);
Significant decrease in cry-fuss time independent of treatment;
Ninty percent of patients were younger than 12 mo;
Entry into study required a reflux index of > 5% or endoscopic biopsy evidence of oesophagitis. Data adapted from Chen et al[23]; Moore et al[24]; Orenstein et al[27]; Shakhnovich et al[28]. PPI: Proton pump inhibitor; GORD: Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease; PGA: Physician global assessment; VA: Visual analogue.