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  Vol. 9 No. 7, July 2000 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Effectiveness and Costs of Omeprazole vs Ranitidine for Treatment of Symptomatic Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease in Primary Care Clinics in West Virginia

Barbara Kaplan-Machlis, PharmD; Gerard E. Spiegler, MS; Marc W. Zodet, MS; Dennis A. Revicki, PhD

Arch Fam Med. 2000;9:624-630.

Objective  To compare clinical, health-related quality of life (HRQL), and medical cost outcomes in patients with symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) receiving omeprazole sodium or ranitidine hydrochloride treatment.

Methods  A multicenter, randomized, open-label, medical effectiveness trial conducted in 5 university-based family medicine clinics. Two hundred sixty-eight patients with GERD were recruited and randomly assigned to omeprazole sodium, 20 mg once daily, or ranitidine hydrochloride, 150 mg twice daily, for up to 6 months. Main outcome assessments included the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS) Reflux score, Psychological General Well-Being Index, and Short-Form–36 Health Survey administered at baseline and 2, 4, 12, and 24 weeks. Medical resource use and cost data were collected.

Results  More omeprazole-treated patients reported improved heartburn resolution at 2 weeks (49.0% vs 33.3%; P=.007) and 4 weeks (58.6% vs 35.0%; P<.001) compared with ranitidine-treated patients. The GSRS Reflux scores across 3 months showed overall differences between omeprazole (mean, 2.67) and ranitidine (mean, 2.95) groups (P=.04). Mean total 6-month medical costs were $915 lower ($8371 vs $9286; P=.64), and no difference in mean outpatient medical costs ($1198 vs $1158; P=.76) were observed in the omeprazole group compared with the ranitidine group. A post hoc secondary analysis showed that, at 12 and 24 weeks, patients treated with omeprazole for 8 weeks or more reported greater heartburn resolution (ie, 24 [43%] of 56 patients at both intervals) than patients treated with ranitidine for 8 weeks or more (12 [24%] and 13 [26%] of 50 patients, respectively; P=.001).

Conclusions  Ranitidine and omeprazole were both effective at improving heartburn symptoms; however, omeprazole provided greater resolution of heartburn symptoms at 2 and 4 weeks. Despite omeprazole's higher acquisition cost, there were no significant differences in total or outpatient costs between groups.


From the Departments of Clinical Pharmacy (Dr Kaplan-Machlis) and Family Medicine (Dr Kaplan-Machlis and Mr Spiegler), West Virginia University, Charleston; and the Center for Health Outcomes Research, Medtap International, Bethesda, Md (Mr Zodet and Dr Revicki).






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