Published online Feb 28, 2020. doi: 10.13105/wjma.v8.i1.1
Peer-review started: November 1, 2019
First decision: November 22, 2019
Revised: December 3, 2019
Accepted: December 14, 2019
Article in press: December 14, 2019
Published online: February 28, 2020
Processing time: 118 Days and 22.6 Hours
The endoscopic diagnosis of gastritis is usually made when a patient develops symptoms and undergoes an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. There are often obvious aetiological causes such as smoking, alcohol Helicobacter pylori infection or drug treatment. Lifestyle changes can sometimes improve symptoms but often patients will be treated with a proton pump inhibitor. The stomach mucosa produces a protective mucous to prevent damage cause by gastric acid and exogenous agents can disrupt this layer. Repair of this protective layer can be enhanced by reduction in gastric acid secretion using H2 receptor antagonist or proton pump inhibitors or by cytoprotective drugs such as misoprostol, sucralfate, aluminium ions or bismuth subsalts. Sucralfate is a complex polymer which at a low pH changes its chemical configuration and binds to serum protein to form a protective layer protecting the mucosa against further injury. Cytoprotective drugs were the first line treatment for peptic disease including gastritis for many years but since the launch of cimetidine in 1976 and the subsequent launch of omeprazole in 1988, their use has slowly declined. First line treatment for patients with symptomatic gastritis after removal of potential causative factors is likely to be a proton pump inhibitor in 2019. This is despite the fact that there is some evidence that sucralfate is superior than a H2 receptor antagonist in the endoscopic healing rates in patients with gastritis. The logical treatment choice in patients with resistance symptoms is a combination of a proton pump inhibitor and sucralfate but evidence is lacking. Until such evidence is available In the meantime, we would suggest that there is a role for sucralfate in the treatment of intransigent gastritis and that mucosal protection should be considered even ahead of acid suppression given its favourable safety and toxicity profile.
Core tip: An endoscopic diagnosis of gastritis is commonly made. When patients have significant symptoms associated with this finding and no other explanation can be found for their symptoms the first line treatment tends to be with a proton pump inhibitor. The combination of a proton pump inhibitor and sucralfate can however, be useful in the treatment of these patients when conventional treatment has failed and symptoms are severe.