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  Vol. 135 No. 6, June 1999 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Effect of Treatment of Helicobacter pylori Infection on Rosacea

Joel T. M. Bamford, MD; Robert L. Tilden, DrPH, MPH; Janet L. Blankush, RN; David E. Gangeness, PharmD

Arch Dermatol. 1999;135:659-663.

Objective  To evaluate the clearing and intensity of symptoms of rosacea 60 days after the treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection.

Design  Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial.

Setting  The dermatology section of a large multispecialty clinic in the North Central United States.

Participants  Men and women older than 25 years with active signs of rosacea who tested positive for H pylori with both the rapid whole blood test and the urea breath test.

Intervention  Treatment of H pylori infection with 14-day therapy using clarithromycin, 500 mg orally 3 times a day, and omeprazole, 40 mg orally once a day.

Main Outcome Variables  The extent and intensity of rosacea as measured by the number of papules and pustules and the extent and intensity of erythema and telangiectasia.

Results  Three hundred twenty patients presented with rosacea. For 50 patients, the results of a urea breath test were positive for H pylori, and 44 patients were enrolled in the study. Rosacea abated in almost all patients, but none were cured. Notably, lessening of rosacea for patients treated for H pylori was not significantly better than for the control cohort.

Conclusions  Rosacea abated in most participants in this study, whether they were in the treatment or the control cohort. There was no statistical difference when the results of active treatment were compared with those of placebo. Treating H pylori infection has no short-term beneficial effect on the symptoms of rosacea to support the suggested causal association between H pylori infection and rosacea.


From the Department of Dermatology (Dr Bamford) and the Division of Education and Research (Drs Tilden and Gangeness and Ms Blankush), St Mary's–Duluth Clinic Health System, Duluth, Minn.



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Archives of Dermatology Reader's Choice: Continuing Medical Education
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