Histologic analysis, performed in 327 patients, showed that 48.4% of patients in the treatment group had improvement in atrophy grade at the gastric corpus lesser curvature, compared to just 15.0% of the placebo group (P less than .001), the investigators reported.
Mild adverse events were more frequent in the treatment arm (42.0% versus 10.2%; P less than .001), and there were no serious adverse events, they added.
Despite the approximate 50% reduction in incidence of new gastric cancers and histologic improvements, the researchers said that further study would be required to optimize treatment approaches for patients undergoing endoscopic resection for high-grade adenoma or early gastric cancer.
“H. pylori eradication reduces, but cannot completely abolish, the risk of metachronous gastric cancer,” wrote Dr. Choi and colleagues. “Thus, molecular markers, including aberrant methylation at specific genes, might help to identify high-risk patients even after successful eradication.”
The researchers reported that they had nothing to disclose related to the study.
SOURCE: Choi et al. N Engl J Med. 2018 Mar 22. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1708423.