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Dive into the research topics where Wieslaw J. Bochenek is active.

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Featured researches published by Wieslaw J. Bochenek.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2000

Oral pantoprazole for erosive esophagitis: a placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial

Joel E. Richter; Wieslaw J. Bochenek

Abstract OBJECTIVES: The aim of this dose-response study was to compare the effectiveness of 10 mg, 20 mg, and 40 mg of pantoprazole with that of placebo tablets in the healing and symptom relief of gastroesophageal reflux disease associated with erosive esophagitis, and to determine the optimal dose. METHODS: A total of 603 patients with endoscopically confirmed (Hetzel-Dent scale) erosive esophagitis of grade 2 (64.5%) or grades 3 or 4 (35.3%) were enrolled in a double-blind, multicenter study and randomly assigned to receive pantoprazole (10 mg, 20 mg, or 40 mg) or placebo, administered once daily in the morning, for 4 or 8 wk depending on healing. RESULTS: The healing rates after 4 wk for placebo and pantoprazole 10 mg, 20 mg, and 40 mg/day were 14%, 42%, 55%, and 72%, respectively (p CONCLUSIONS: Pantoprazole was safe and effective for healing erosive esophagitis and provided rapid symptomatic relief. These results indicate that pantoprazole offers a new option for treatment of erosive esophagitis. Among the three doses studied, the 40-mg dose was the most effective.


Gastroenterology | 2000

Intravenous pantoprazole rapidly controls gastric acid hypersecretion in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.

Edward A. Lew; Joseph R. Pisegna; Julie Starr; Elaine Soffer; Chris E. Forsmark; Irvin M. Modlin; John H. Walsh; Mirza Beg; Wieslaw J. Bochenek; David C. Metz

BACKGROUND & AIMS Parenteral control of gastric acid hypersecretion in conditions such as Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) or idiopathic gastric acid hypersecretion is necessary perioperatively or when oral medications cannot be taken for other reasons (e.g., during chemotherapy, acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding, or in intensive care unit settings). METHODS We evaluated the efficacy and safety of 15-minute infusions of the proton pump inhibitor pantoprazole (80-120 mg every 8-12 hours) in controlling acid output for up to 7 days. Effective control was defined as acid output >10 milliequivalents per hour (mEq/h) (<5 mEq/h in patients with prior acid-reducing surgery) for 24 hours. RESULTS The 21 patients enrolled had a mean age of 51.9 years (range, 29-75) and a mean disease duration of 8.1 years (range, <0.5-21); 13 were male, 7 had multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type I, 4 had undergone acid-reducing surgery, 2 had received chemotherapy, and 13 had undergone gastrinoma resections without cure. Basal acid output (mean +/- SD) was 40.2 +/- 27.9 mEq/h (range, 11.2-117.9). In all patients, acid output was controlled within the first hour (mean onset of effective control, 41 minutes) after an initial 80-mg intravenous pantoprazole dose. Pantoprazole, 80 mg every 12 hours, was effective in 17 of 21 patients (81%) for up to 7 days. Four patients required upward dose titration, 2 required 120 mg pantoprazole every 12 hours, and 2 required 80 mg every 8 hours. At study end, acid output remained controlled for 6 hours beyond the next expected dose in 71% of patients (n = 15); mean acid output increased to 4.0 mEq/h (range, 0-9.7). No serious or unexpected adverse events were observed. CONCLUSIONS Intravenous pantoprazole, 160-240 mg/day administered in divided doses by 15-minute infusion, rapidly and effectively controlled acid output within 1 hour and maintained control for up to 7 days in all ZES patients.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2001

Replacement of oral proton pump inhibitors with intravenous pantoprazole to effectively control gastric acid hypersecretion in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome

David C. Metz; Chris E. Forsmark; Edward A. Lew; Julie Starr; Elaine Soffer; Wieslaw J. Bochenek; Joseph R. Pisegna

OBJECTIVES:In patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) or other conditions requiring oral doses of proton pump inhibitors, it frequently becomes necessary to use parenterally administered gastric acid inhibitors. However, i.v. histamine-2 receptor antagonists are not effective at usual doses and lose their effectiveness because of tachyphlaxis. With the approval in the United States of i.v. pantoprazole, a substituted benzimidazole available in i.v. formulation, it will become possible to acutely manage gastric acid secretion in the acute care setting of a hospital. This study was developed to monitor the safety and establish the efficacy of i.v. pantoprazole as an alternative to oral proton pump inhibitors for the control of gastric acid hypersecretion in patients with ZES.METHODS:The efficacy of replacing oral PPI therapy with i.v. pantoprazole was evaluated in 14 ZES patients. After study enrollment, patients taking their current doses of oral PPI (omeprazole or lansoprazole) were switched to pantoprazole i.v. for 6 days during an 8-day inpatient period in the clinical research center. Effective control was defined as an acid output (AO) of <10 mEq/h (<5 mEq/h in patients with prior gastric acid-reducing surgery).RESULTS:The mean age of the 14 patients enrolled in the study was 52.4 yr (range = 38–67). Mean basal AO was 0.55 ± 0.32 mEq/h and mean fasting gastrin was 1089 pg/ml (range = 36–3720). Four patients were also diagnosed with the multiple endocrine neoplasia type I syndrome, nine were male, and two had previously undergone acid-reducing surgery. Before study enrollment, gastric acid hypersecretion was controlled in nine of 14 patients with omeprazole (20–200 mg daily) and five of 14 with lansoprazole (30–210 mg daily). In the oral phase of the study all patients had adequate control of gastric acid secretion, with a mean AO of 0.55 ± 0.32 mEq/h (mean ± SEM). Thereafter, 80 mg of i.v. pantoprazole was administered b.i.d. for 7 days by a brief (15 min) infusion and the dose was titrated upward to a predetermined maximum of 240 mg/24 h to control AO. A dose of 80 mg b.i.d. of i.v. pantoprazole controlled AO in 13 of 14 of the patients (93%) for the duration of the study (p > 0.05 compared to baseline values for all timepoints). One sporadic ZES patient (oral control value = 0.65 mEq/h on 100 mg of omeprazole b.i.d. p.o.) was not controlled with 80 mg of i.v. pantoprazole b.i.d. and dosage was titrated upward to 120 mg b.i.d. after day 2.CONCLUSIONS:There were no serious adverse events observed. Intravenous pantoprazole provides gastric acid secretory control that is equivalent to the acid suppression observed with oral proton pump inhibitors. Most ZES patients (93%) maintained effective control of AO previously established with oral PPIs when switched to 80 mg of i.v. pantoprazole b.i.d.; however, for difficult-to-control patients, doses >80 mg b.i.d. may be required.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2003

Maintenance oral pantoprazole therapy is effective for patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and idiopathic hypersecretion.

David C. Metz; Elaine Soffer; Chris E. Forsmark; Byron Cryer; William Y. Chey; Wieslaw J. Bochenek; Joseph R. Pisegna

OBJECTIVE:Maintenance proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy is effective for gastric acid hypersecretory states, although data with pantoprazole are limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of long term p.o. pantoprazole in individuals with hypersecretion.METHODS:All subjects had Zollinger-Ellison syndrome or idiopathic hypersecretion. Baseline acid output was measured in the presence of prior maintenance antisecretory therapy before pantoprazole exposure. The starting dose was 40 mg b.i.d. in most cases, and the dose was adjusted to document control within the first 2 wk of therapy. The maximal allowable dose was 240 mg daily. Acid output was measured on day 28 and then quarterly from month 3. The primary efficacy endpoint was documented control of acid secretion at 6 months, i.e., acid output in the last 1 h before the next dose of therapy of <10 mEq/h (<5 mEq/h in subjects with prior acid-reducing surgery).RESULTS:A total of 26 subjects had Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (six with multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 1) and nine had idiopathic hypersecretion. Pre-enrollment therapy included omeprazole in 27 subjects and lansoprazole in eight, and 82.4% of subjects were controlled on their prior regimens. With upward dose titration, acid output was controlled in all subjects by day 10 and in all but two (6%) at the 6-month time point. Median acid secretion on therapy at 6 months was <2 mEq/h (mean 2.2 mEq/h; range 0–10.5 mEq/h) at a dose of 40 mg b.i.d. for 24 subjects, 80 mg b.i.d. for seven subjects, and 120 mg b.i.d. for two subjects. During the course of the study, five subjects required doses of 240 mg daily. Pantoprazole was generally well tolerated. No cases of anterior optic ischemic neuropathy occurred. Five subjects died during follow-up, all because of events unrelated to the study drug.CONCLUSIONS:Maintenance p.o. pantoprazole therapy at a dose of 80–240 mg/day in divided doses was both effective and generally well tolerated for patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and idiopathic hypersecretion.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2002

Proton pump activation in stimulated parietal cells is regulated by gastric acid secretory capacity: a human study.

David C. Metz; Geraldine M. Ferron; Jeffrey Paul; Mary Beth Turner; Elaine Soffer; Joseph R. Pisegna; Wieslaw J. Bochenek

Under normal physiological conditions, gastric acid production is controlled by a negative feedback mechanism. Proton pump inhibitors, such as pantoprazole, inhibit gastric acid secretion by irreversibly binding and inactivating luminally active hydrogen potassium ATPase. Recovery of acid production after treatment with a proton pump inhibitor is driven by new pump synthesis, activation of existing cytoplasmic pumps, or reversal of proton pump inhibition. The authors measured the time course of the inhibition and recovery of acid secretion in healthy volunteers following intravenous administration of pantoprazole to determine the rate of proton pump activation under maximally stimulated conditions. Gastric acid production was measured in 27 Helicobacter pylori negative healthy volunteers (mean age = 31 ± 7 years; 17 men, 10 women) who received single doses of intravenous pantoprazole (20, 40, 80, or 120 mg) in the presence of a continuous intravenous infusion of 1 ug/kg/h of pentagastrin. From the time profile of acid secretion, the authors described the rate of change of acid output using an irreversible pharmacodynamic response model represented by the equation dR/dt = −k ṁ R ṁ Cpanto + Ln2/PPR ṁ (Ro‐R) and correlated the parameter values with demographic factors and gastric acid measurements. Mean stimulated acid output secretion was 21.6 ± 18.4 mEq/h (range: 1.6–90.5) prior to the administration of pantoprazole and remained steady for 25 hours after placebo administration. Intravenous pantoprazole inhibited acid output in a dose‐response fashion, with maximal inhibition (99.9%) occurring after an 80 mg dose. Mean proton pump recovery time was 37.1 ± 21.0 hours (range: 6.7–75), and recovery was independent of the dose of pantoprazole. There was no association noted between proton pump recovery time and gender, age, race, body weight, or pantoprazole dose. However, there was an inverse correlation between acid output during baseline stimulation and recovery of acid secretion. Mean proton pump recovery time in stimulated normal human volunteers was 37.1 ± 21.0 hours, with a range of 6.7 to 75 hours. The authors hypothesize that there may be a normal homeostatic mechanism that maintains acid secretory capability within a normal range by altering the rate of proton pump activation dependent on the individuals parietal cell mass. Abnormalities of this process may be responsible for the development of acid peptic disease in susceptible individuals.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2018

Low-Dose Linaclotide (72 μg) for Chronic Idiopathic Constipation: A 12-Week, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial

Philip Schoenfeld; Brian E. Lacy; William D. Chey; Anthony Lembo; Caroline B. Kurtz; David S. Reasner; Wieslaw J. Bochenek; Kenneth J. Tripp; Mark G. Currie; Susan M. Fox; Rick E. Blakesley; Christopher R O’Dea; Nicholas Omniewski; Michael Hall

Objectives:Linaclotide is a guanylate cyclase-C agonist approved in the United States, Canada, and Mexico at a once-daily 145-μg dose for the treatment of chronic idiopathic constipation (CIC); a once-daily 72-μg dose for CIC recently received FDA approval. The trial objective was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a 72-μg linaclotide dose in CIC patients.Methods:This double-blind, placebo-controlled trial randomized patients with CIC (Rome III criteria) to once-daily linaclotide 72 μg or 145 μg, or placebo for 12 weeks. The primary endpoint, 12-week complete spontaneous bowel movement (CSBM) overall responder, required patients to have ≥3 CSBMs and an increase of ≥1 CSBM per week from baseline in the same week for ≥9 of 12 weeks of the treatment period. Secondary endpoints included 12-week change from baseline in bowel (SBM and CSBM frequency, stool consistency, straining) and abdominal (bloating, discomfort) symptoms, monthly CSBM responders, and 12-week CSBM responders among patients who averaged >1 SBM/week at baseline. Sustained response (12-week CSBM overall responders who met weekly criteria for 3 of the 4 final weeks (weeks 9–12) of treatment) was evaluated as an additional endpoint. Adverse events (AEs) were monitored.Results:The intent-to-treat population included 1,223 patients (mean age=46 years, female=77%, white=71%). The primary endpoint was met by 13.4% of linaclotide 72-μg patients vs. 4.7% of placebo patients (P<0.0001, odds ratio=3.0; statistically significant controlling for multiplicity). Sustained response was achieved by 12.4% of linaclotide 72-μg patients vs. 4.2% of placebo patients (nominal P<0.0001). Linaclotide 72-μg patients met 9-of-10 secondary endpoints vs. placebo (P<0.05; abdominal discomfort, P=0.1028). Patients treated with linaclotide 145 μg also improved CIC symptoms for the primary (12.4%) and sustained responder endpoint parameters (11.4%) and for all 10 of the secondary endpoint parameters including abdominal discomfort (P<0.05). Diarrhea, the most common AE, was mild in most instances and resulted in discontinuation of 0, 2.4%, and 3.2% of patients in the placebo, linaclotide 72-μg, and linaclotide 145-μg groups, respectively.Conclusions:Once-daily linaclotide 72 μg significantly improved CIC symptoms in both men and women with a low rate of discontinuation due to diarrhea over 12 weeks of treatment.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2003

Successful treatment of elderly patients with erosive esophagitis (EE) using pantoprazole 40 mg

Kenneth R. DeVault; Richard B. Lynn; Wieslaw J. Bochenek; Michael E. Mack; Robyn G. Karlstadt; David C. Metz

Successful treatment of elderly patients with erosive esophagitis (EE) using pantoprazole 40 mg


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2000

Pantoprazole 40 and 20 mg prevents gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) relapse regardless of H. pylori status

Wieslaw J. Bochenek; Wilfred M. Weinstein; David C. Metz; David Miska

Pantoprazole 40 and 20 mg prevents gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) relapse regardless of H. pylori status


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2000

The impact of gender, age, and severity of erosive esophagitis (EE) on the efficacy of GERD maintenance therapy with pantoprazole (Panto) and ranitidine (Ran)

Wieslaw J. Bochenek; Robert S. Northington

Purpose: To determine whether, during 1 year of therapy with Panto 10, 20, or 40 mg QD, or Ran 150 mg BID, the likelihood of EE relapse was affected by demographic or baseline characteristics (age, weight, race, gender, H. pylori status, prehealing EE severity [grades 2, and grades 3 or 4 on Hetzel-Dent scale], or presence of baseline symptoms.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2000

The effect of Helicobacter pylori (Hp) on symptoms and healing of erosive esophagitis during pantopraxole therapy

Thomas O. Kovacs; Eileen Doherty; Robert S. Northington; Lynne Smith; Wieslaw J. Bochenek

Purpose: To determine the relation of H. pylori (Hp) infection to symptom relief and healing rate in gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) patients with erosive esophagitis (EE) who were treated with pantoprazole (Panto) 40 mg daily for 4 or 8 weeks.

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David C. Metz

University of Pennsylvania

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Elaine Soffer

University of Pennsylvania

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Joseph R. Pisegna

National Institutes of Health

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Edward A. Lew

West Los Angeles College

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Joel E. Richter

University of South Florida

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Julie Starr

University of Pennsylvania

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