Of those patients who received ranitidine alone, 50% relapsed within 12 weeks of healing, and by the end of the study period, only three patients in the ranitidine-alone group were free of ulcer. In seven patients who received triple therapy, H. pylori was not eradicated; four of these had ulcer recurrence, the other three were lost to follow-up. Three patients with duodenal ulcer and two with recurrent gastric ulcer had relapses despite eradication of H. pylori; all were taking NSAIDs. Indeed, the only two risk factors for ulcer recurrence were chronic NSAID therapy and H. pylori infection; smoking and alcohol consumption, long thought to be associated with peptic ulcer disease, did not emerge as risk factors. Ten patients in the ranitidine-alone group who relapsed after ulcer healing were crossed over to triple therapy (plus ranitidine). The antibiotic regimen cleared H. pylori infection, and follow-up (ranging from 23 to 116 weeks) showed no relapses. Four patients with ranitidine-resistant ulcers were also crossed over to triple therapy and showed prompt healing with no relapse (follow-up: median, 40 weeks). The investigators recommended that "patients with resistant ulcers (defined as failure to heal in 12 weeks), those with ulcer-associated complications, and those with symptoms severe enough to be candidates for surgery receive triple therapy for H. pylori infection."Graham DY. Ann Intern Med





