Quick Overview
Dyspepsia (epigastric pain/discomfort) affects ~25% of the population annually. GORD (gastro-oesophageal reflux disease) results from lower oesophageal sphincter dysfunction causing acid reflux. NICE CG184 provides evidence-based guidance on PPI prescribing, H. pylori management, and when to refer urgently. Key focus: distinguishing uncomplicated dyspepsia from alarm features requiring endoscopy within 2 weeks.
Core Facts & Concepts
Definitions & Epidemiology
- Dyspepsia: Epigastric pain/burning, postprandial fullness, early satiety for ≥4 weeks
- GORD: Symptoms (heartburn, regurgitation) ± oesophageal mucosal injury from reflux
- Prevalence: 10-30% adults; only 10-15% have erosive oesophagitis on endoscopy
🚩 Red Flag Symptoms (Urgent Endoscopy <2 weeks)
- Age ≥55 years with unexplained persistent dyspepsia
- Dysphagia (any age)
- Progressive unintentional weight loss
- Persistent vomiting
- Upper abdominal mass
- Iron-deficiency anaemia
- Gastrointestinal bleeding (melaena/haematemesis)

H. pylori Testing Strategies
- Test-and-treat: For uninvestigated dyspepsia without red flags, age <55
- Methods: Urea breath test (UBT) or stool antigen test (NOT serology)
- Stop PPI 2 weeks before testing (false negatives)
- Eradication therapy: 7-day triple therapy (PPI + amoxicillin + clarithromycin/metronidazole)
- Confirm eradication: UBT ≥4 weeks post-treatment
PPI Prescribing (NICE CG184)
- Initial: Full-dose PPI (e.g., omeprazole 20mg) for 4 weeks
- Maintenance: Lowest effective dose, on-demand therapy preferred
- Review annually: Attempt dose reduction or stopping
Problem-Solving Approach
Step-by-Step Management
- Assess for red flags → Urgent endoscopy if present (age ≥55 + new dyspepsia = red flag)
- Review medications: NSAIDs, calcium antagonists, nitrates, bisphosphonates (cause/worsen symptoms)
- Lifestyle modifications (offer to all):
- Weight loss if BMI >25
- Avoid late-night meals (≥3 hours before bed)
- Reduce alcohol, caffeine, fatty foods
- Smoking cessation
- Elevate bed head (not extra pillows)
- H. pylori test-and-treat (age <55, no red flags):
- Stop PPI 2 weeks before test
- Eradicate if positive
- Confirm eradication ≥4 weeks post-treatment
- Empirical PPI trial: Full-dose × 4 weeks if H. pylori negative or eradication confirmed
- Step-up therapy: Double-dose PPI or add H2-receptor antagonist (e.g., ranitidine) if inadequate response
- Refer for endoscopy: Persistent symptoms after treatment, recurrent relapse, or patient preference

⚠️ Warning: Do NOT use serology for H. pylori testing-remains positive after eradication, cannot confirm current infection.
Analysis Framework
Differential Diagnosis of Dyspepsia
| Diagnosis | Key Features | Investigation |
|---|---|---|
| GORD | Heartburn, regurgitation, worse lying flat | Endoscopy (often normal), pH monitoring |
| Peptic ulcer | Epigastric pain, relation to meals, NSAID use | Endoscopy + biopsy (H. pylori) |
| Functional dyspepsia | No structural abnormality, normal endoscopy | Diagnosis of exclusion |
| Gastric cancer | Weight loss, anaemia, age >55, dysphagia | Endoscopy + biopsy |
| Biliary colic | RUQ pain, postprandial, radiates to back | Ultrasound (gallstones) |
When to Step Down/Stop PPI
- Symptom-free for 4-8 weeks → Trial dose reduction
- Attempt on-demand therapy (take when symptomatic)
- Review annually-long-term PPI risks: C. difficile, osteoporosis, hypomagnesaemia
Visual Aid
Key Points Summary
✓ Red flags (age ≥55 + new dyspepsia, dysphagia, weight loss, anaemia, GI bleeding) → urgent endoscopy <2 weeks
✓ Test-and-treat H. pylori in age <55 without red flags using UBT or stool antigen (stop PPI 2 weeks before)
✓ PPI therapy: Full-dose × 4 weeks initially, then step down to lowest effective dose or on-demand (NICE CG184)
✓ Lifestyle modifications: Weight loss, avoid late meals, reduce alcohol/caffeine, smoking cessation, elevate bed head
✓ Confirm H. pylori eradication with UBT ≥4 weeks post-treatment (NOT serology-stays positive)
✓ Review PPI annually: Attempt dose reduction/stopping-long-term risks include C. difficile, osteoporosis, hypomagnesaemia
✓ Refer for endoscopy: Persistent symptoms despite treatment, recurrent relapse, patient preference for investigation
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