Esomeprazole is an effective, well tolerated treatment for managing GORD and for eradicating H. pylori infection in patients with duodenal ulcer disease. In 8-week double-blind trials, esomeprazole healed oesophagitis and resolved symptoms in patients with endoscopically confirmed erosive oesophagitis and overall, provided better efficacy than omeprazole. Notably, in a large (n >5000 patients) double-blind trial, esomeprazole 40mg provided significantly better efficacy than lansoprazole in terms of healing rates and resolution of symptoms. Long-term therapy with esomeprazole maintained healed oesophagitis in these patients. Esomeprazole also proved beneficial in patients with symptomatic GORD without oesophagitis. Thus, esomeprazole has emerged as an option for first-line therapy in the management of acid-related disorders.
Telmisartan is an effective antihypertensive agent with a tolerability profile similar to that of placebo. Comparative data have shown telmisartan to be as effective as other major classes of antihypertensive agents at lowering blood pressure. Compared with lisinopril, telmisartan is associated with a significantly lower incidence of dry, persistent cough. Therefore, telmisartan is a useful therapeutic option in the management of patients with hypertension.
Monotherapy with PEG-liposomal doxorubicin is effective as a second-line chemotherapy in patients with platinum-refractory ovarian cancer and in patients with metastatic breast cancer. However, as with all chemotherapeutic agents, the benefits of treatment need to be weighed against the agent's tolerability profile. Strong comparative data have helped to establish PEG-liposomal doxorubicin as the first-line treatment option in patients with advanced Kaposi's sarcoma. Anticancer activity has also been observed in studies conducted in small numbers of patients with multiple myeloma or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma receiving PEG-liposomal doxorubicin instead of standard doxorubicin in combination regimens, although further data are needed to confirm the clinical relevance of these findings.
Alendronate is effective and generally well tolerated in the treatment of women or men with primary (including postmenopausal) or corticosteroid-induced osteoporosis and in the prevention of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women. The drug has been associated with upper GI tract adverse events, although the extent to which alendronate is responsible for these events has not been clearly established. Alendronate should be considered a treatment of choice in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis. Alendronate is also a suitable treatment option for primary osteoporosis in men and for corticosteroid-induced osteoporosis in both men and women.
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