We compared the efficacy of two therapies to eradicate H. pylori infection including ranitidine bismuth citrate (400 mg twice daily), clarithromycin (500 mg twice daily), and tinidazole (500 mg twice daily), administered for six or seven days. Eighty H. pylori-positive patients were consecutively recruited and randomly subdivided into groups A and B, receiving one of the two treatment regimens. The H. pylori status was evaluated by means of histology and rapid urease test at entry, and by [13C]urea breath test alone eight weeks after treatment. All 40 patients in group A and 39/40 in group B completed the study. Thirty-six of 40 patients in the group A (90%) and 36 of 39 in the group B (92%) became H. pylori-negative. Slight or mild side-effects occurred in 4/40 patients (10%) of group A and in 5/39 (13%) of group B. In conclusion, both regimens we tested yielded high eradication rates with modest side effects. This is the first trial investigating a triple-drug RBC-based regimen administered for only six days.