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Abdominal Pain Response to Rifaximin in Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome With Diarrhea

Anthony Lembo, Satish S.C. Rao, Zeev Heimanson, Mark Pimentel

2020Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Abdominal pain is the principal symptom of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). This analysis examined abdominal pain response in adults with IBS with diarrhea (IBS-D) receiving the nonsystemic antibiotic rifaximin. METHODS: In the Targeted Nonsystemic Antibiotic Rifaximin Gut-Selective Evaluation of Treatment for IBS-D 3 trial, adults with IBS-D received open-label rifaximin 550 mg 3 times daily for 2 weeks, followed by the 4-week post-treatment phase assessing abdominal pain and stool consistency response. Responders were followed for up to 18 additional weeks; patients with recurrence were randomly assigned to receive two 2-week courses of double-blind rifaximin 550 mg 3 times daily or placebo, separated by 10 weeks. Analyses evaluated mean weekly improvements from baseline (e.g., ≥30%, ≥40%, and ≥50%) in abdominal pain during the 4-week post-repeat-treatment phases. RESULTS: Of the 2,438 evaluable patients, 1,384 (56.8%) had abdominal pain response to open-label rifaximin (≥30% improvement from baseline in the mean weekly abdominal pain score during ≥2 of the first 4 weeks post-treatment). Weekly decrease (improvement) in responders' mean abdominal pain score (scale range, 0-10) from baseline ranged from -2.6 to -3.3 points during the 18-week follow-up. After the first double-blind repeat treatment, a significantly higher percentage of rifaximin-treated patients were abdominal pain responders (53.9% [172/319]) vs placebo (44.4% [134/302], P = 0.02), with similar results after the second repeat treatment (52.9% [155/293] vs 44.7% [123/275], respectively, P = 0.047). A significantly higher percentage of rifaximin-treated patients were weekly abdominal pain responders for ≥50% of the 18-week double-blind repeat treatment phase (47.9% [138/288] vs 35.9% [97/270], P = 0.004). DISCUSSION: Rifaximin is efficacious in improving abdominal pain in adults with IBS-D.

Topics & Concepts

RifaximinMedicineIrritable bowel syndromeAbdominal painPlaceboDiarrheaInternal medicineGastroenterologyAntibioticsPathologyAlternative medicineMicrobiologyBiologyGastrointestinal motility and disordersTravel-related health issuesClinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology
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