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Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is a gram-negative bacterium that colonizes human gastric mucosa and is associated with chronic gastritis that can progress to severe complications such as peptic ulcer disease, gastric adenocarcinoma and gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma. More than half of the world's population is infected with H. pylori and Portugal is one of the countries with the highest Hp burden. All of infected patients should be treated, however, H. pylori treatment is challenged by the continuously rising antibiotic resistance which has reached alarming levels worldwide. For this reason, it is now well accepted that tailoring treatment of H. pylori infection based on systematic antimicrobial susceptibility testing is useful to avoid the increase of antibiotic resistance.
Our aims are to determine prospectively the efficacy and safety of first-line H. pylori eradication treatment based on resistance profile (determined by molecular methods) vs. empirical bismuth quadruple therapy, to evaluate the accuracy of H. pylori detection by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (vs. histopathological examination) and to estimate the prevalence of H. pylori infection and H. pylori resistance to clarithromycin and levofloxacin in Portugal.
This prospective study will be the first national study to investigate the benefits of tailored H. pylori eradication treatment. The investigators expect that this project will be able to demonstrate the non-inferiority of susceptibility-guided treatment comparing with empirical therapy, and our results may change H. pylori treatment recommendations by systematically applying antibiotic susceptibility testing before prescribing eradication therapy.
Full description
A prospective, multicenter, randomized, controlled interventional trial in two arms: intervention group and control group.
Eligible patients will receive oral and written information and will be enrolled after giving written informed consent.
In all patients complete gastroscopy with white light will be performed and endoscopic findings will be recorded. For each patient, gastric body and antral biopsies will be collected. All gastric samples will be tested for H. pylori infection by histopathological examination and PCR. All H. pylori positive samples will be tested for clarithromycin (mutations in the 23S rRNA gene, A2134G, A2142G and A2142C mutations) and levofloxacin resistance (mutations in the gyrA gene) by PCR.
All H. pylori positive patients will be randomized in two groups:
INTERVENTION GROUP: Patients randomized to the Intervention group will receive a prescription for oriented H. pylori eradication treatment according to the following rules: a) clarithromycin-sensitive strain (independently of levofloxacin resistance test result) - PPI, amoxicillin 1 g and clarithromycin 500 mg, twice daily, for 10 days; b) clarithromycin-resistant and levofloxacin-sensitive strain - PPI, amoxicillin 1g and levofloxacin 250 mg, twice daily, for 10 days; c) clarithromycin-resistant and levofloxacin-resistant strain - bismuth quadruple therapy (Pylera®) for 10 days. At least 4 weeks after stopping antibiotics (and at least 2 weeks after stopping PPIs), an eradication control test will be carried out using a respiratory test (urea breath test) or endoscopic biopsies (if clinical indication for that).
CONTROL GROUP: Patients randomized to the Control group will receive a prescription for empirically H. pylori eradication treatment with bismuth quadruple therapy (Pylera®) for 10 days. At least 4 weeks after stopping antibiotics (and at least 2 weeks after stopping PPIs), an eradication control test will be carried out using a respiratory test (urea breath test) or endoscopic biopsies (if clinical indication for that).
All patients that complete eradication treatment regimen will be evaluated 2 to 4 weeks after performing the eradication control (urea breath test) in a clinical consultation. Eventual adverse effects will be recorded. A negative breath test will define the success of the treatment, while a positive test will define treatment failure. The latter will be managed according to H. pylori infection guidelines.
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160 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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