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For detailed information about the management of dyspepsia see:
NHS England (NHSE) has published new prescribing guidance for various common conditions for which over the counter (OTC) items should not be routinely prescribed in primary care (quick reference guide). These conditions include indigestion and heartburn.
Many indigestion and heartburn treatments are cheap to buy and are readily available OTC along with advice from pharmacies. Some self-care medicines are available from shops and supermarkets. Please click here for further information, exceptions, and a patient leaflet.
If acid suppression is necessary, lifestyle changes should be pursued which are important in reflux disease. People should be advised on:
Always review the medications of patients presenting with dyspepsia with a view to possible causes of symptoms.
Encourage people who need long-term management symptoms to reduce their use of prescribed medication step-wise:
Patients should be warned that symptoms may increase for a few days after stopping PPI therapy due to rebound acid secretion, but symptoms will settle again. Weaning the PPI over a few days could be considered to try to prevent this.
See section 1.3.5 Proton pump inhibitors (PPI)
See formulary 1.1 Dyspepsia and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease
Review medications for possible causes of dyspepsia. In people requiring referral, suspend NSAID use. See Prescribing non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for further information on NSAID prescribing.
Think about the possibility of cardiac of biliary disease as part of the differential diagnosis
Consider endoscopy if the person has GORD to screen for Barrett's oesophagus. Do not routinely offer endoscopy to diagnose Barrett's oesophagus,
Western Locality referral guidance for GORD and peptic ulcers can be accessed here.
Immediate (same day) specialist referral should be made for people with significant acute gastrointestinal bleeding.
Do not offer acid-suppression drugs (PPI or H2-receptor antagonists (H2RA)) before endoscopy to patients with suspected non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding.
Refer also to NICE CG141: Acute Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding and see section: 7.2 Oesophageal varices.
See here: Upper gastrointestinal tract 2 week wait referral
H2RAs: Shortages are expected throughout 2020. Please check availability of H2RAs before prescribing
Review medication for possible causes of dyspepsia and offer lifestyle advice, including promoting continued use of antacids/alginates.
PPI for 4 weeks and stop
or
Offer H. pylori 'test and treat':
The majority of patients with functional dyspepsia (64%) will have persistent symptoms despite eradication, therefore routine retesting is not recommended.
Consider retesting if:
If retesting, wait at least 4 weeks, ideally 8 weeks, and use the H. pylori stool antigen test
See sections 1.3.1 H2-receptor antagonists and 1.3.5 Proton pump inhibitors (PPI)
Consider referral to a specialist service, for people with H. pylori that has not responded to second-line eradication therapy, see Dyspepsia CRG (Western Locality / South Devon & Torbay)
Return to self-care.
If symptoms return following initial treatment use lowest dose of PPI to control symptoms. Consider 'as needed' treatment. Step down and step off to antacids and/or alginates whenever possible.
H2RAs: Shortages are expected throughout 2020. Please check availability of H2RAs before prescribing
(Functional dyspepsia or non-erosive reflux disease)
Manage endoscopically determined functional (non-ulcer) dyspepsia using initial treatment for H. pylori if present, followed by symptomatic management and periodic monitoring. Re-testing after eradication should not be offered routinely. Please refer to H. pylori eradication in Chapter 5 for information on treatment regimens
If H. pylori has been excluded and symptoms persist, offer a low dose PPI (e.g. omeprazole 10mg once daily) or H2RA, other than ranitidine, for 4 weeks.
In either case, if symptoms continue or recur after initial treatment, offer a PPI or H2RA, other than ranitidine, to be taken at the lowest dose which controls symptoms; discuss with patient using PPI treatment when required to manage symptoms. (See section 1.3.1 H2-receptor antagonists re. suspension of licence for ranitidine)
Avoid long-term, frequent dose, continuous antacid therapy. It only relieves symptoms rather than preventing them.
See section 1.3 Antisecretory drugs and mucosal protectants
H2RAs: Shortages are expected throughout 2020. Please check availability of H2RAs before prescribing
Manage uninvestigated 'reflux-like' symptoms as uninvestigated dyspepsia - see above for guidance.
GORD is defined by NICE CG184 as endoscopically determined oesophagitis or endoscopy negative reflux disease.
Offer people who have GORD a PPI for 4-8 weeks
If symptoms recur following initial treatment use lowest dose of PPI which controls symptoms. Consider 'as needed' treatment. Step down and step off to antacids and/or alginates whenever possible.
Offer H. pylori 'test and treat':
Consider retesting if:
If retesting, wait at least 4 weeks, ideally 8 weeks, and use the H. pylori stool antigen test
See sections 1.3.1 H2-receptor antagonists and 1.3.5 Proton pump inhibitors (PPI)
H2RAs: Shortages are expected throughout 2020. Please check availability of H2RAs before prescribing
Offer H. pylori eradication therapy to H. pylori positive people with peptic ulcer disease.
For people using NSAIDs with diagnosed peptic ulcer, stop the use of NSAIDs where possible. Offer PPI (omeprazole 20mg daily) or H2RA, other than ranitidine, for 2 months and if H. pylori is present, subsequently offer eradication therapy.
Offer PPI (omeprazole 20mg daily) or H2RA, other than ranitidine, for 4 to 8 weeks to people who have tested negative for H. pylori and who are not taking NSAIDs.
Offer repeat endoscopy to patients with gastric ulcer and H. pylori, 6-8 weeks after beginning treatment.
Offer people with peptic ulcer (gastric or duodenal) and H. pylori, retesting for H. pylori 6 to 8 weeks after beginning treatment.
In people with an unhealed ulcer, exclude non-adherence, malignancy, failure to detect H. pylori, inadvertent NSAID use, other ulcer-inducing medication and rare causes such as Zollinger–Ellison syndrome or Crohn's disease.
If symptoms recur following initial treatment, offer a PPI at the lowest dose which controls symptoms, or discuss using the treatment on an 'as-needed' basis. Offer H2RA, other than ranitidine, if there is an inadequate response to a PPI.
For people continuing to take NSAIDs after a peptic ulcer has healed, discuss the potential harm from NSAID treatment. Review the need for NSAID use regularly (at least every 6 months) and offer a trial of use on a limited, 'as needed' basis. Consider reducing the dose, substituting an NSAID with paracetamol, or using an alternative analgesic or low-dose ibuprofen (1.2 g daily). In patients for whom NSAID continuation is necessary co-prescribe an NSAID (consider a COX-2 selective NSAID) with a PPI. For further information on when to prescribe a PPI alongside an NSAID please see Prescribing non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
See section 1.3 Antisecretory drugs and mucosal protectants
Offer a PPI for 8 weeks to heal severe oesophagitis
If initial treatment fails consider increasing to a high dose of the initial PPI (omeprazole 40mg twice daily), switching to an alternative PPI (lansoprazole 30mg daily), or switching to another high dose PPI (lansoprazole 30mg twice daily).
Offer a full-dose PPI (omeprazole 40mg once daily or lansoprazole 30mg once daily) long-term as maintenance treatment for people with severe oesophagitis.
Consider repeat oesophago-gastro duodenoscopy (OGD) to assess healing. If well, continue maintenance at the same dose.
If the person's severe oesophagitis fails to respond to maintenance treatment, carry out a clinical review. Consider switching to an alternative PPI (lansoprazole 30mg daily) or high dose PPI (lansoprazole 30mg twice a day) and/or seeking specialist advice.
People who have had dilatation of an oesophageal stricture should remain on long-term full-dose PPI therapy.
See section 1.3.5 Proton pump inhibitors (PPI)
Initially omeprazole 60mg daily, usual dose range 20-120mg daily (doses above 80mg in two divided doses); remain on the same dose long-term.
See section 1.3.5 Proton pump inhibitors (PPI)
Management of short bowel syndrome and intestinal failure: offer omeprazole 20mg twice daily until resolution.
Omeprazole 20mg-40mg intravenously twice daily may be given if bowel very short and high output difficult to manage. The benefit of intravenous omeprazole should be objectively demonstrated. See section 1.3.5 Proton pump inhibitors (PPI)