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Empiric treatment vs susceptibility-guided treatment for eradicating H. pylori: Is it possible to change that paradigm using modern molecular methods?

  • L F Garrido-Treviñoc(Author)
    ,
  • M López-Martínezc(Author)
    ,
  • J A Flores-Hinojosac(Author)
    ,
  • ,
  • F Bosques-Padillab(Author)
  • aLaboratorio Hospital San José TecSalud
    ,
  • bHospital Universitario de Fuenlabrada
    ,
  • cInstituto de Salud Digestiva
Research Output: Contribution to journal Review article Peer-review

Sustainable Development Goals

  • SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well

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Citations
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Abstract

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection is the most widespread infectious-contagious disease worldwide, reaching a prevalence of 50-80% in developing countries. Chronic infection is considered the main cause of chronic gastritis and has been related to other diseases, such as peptic ulcer, gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma, and gastric cancer. The most common treatment is with eradication regimens that utilize three or four drugs, including a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) and the antibiotics, clarithromycin and amoxycillin or metronidazole. Empiric antibiotic use for eradicating the bacterium has led to a growing resistance to those drugs, reducing regimen efficacy and increasing costs for both the patient and the healthcare sector. In such a context, the development of noninvasive next-generation molecular methods holds the promise of revolutionizing the treatment of H. pylori. The genotypic and phenotypic detection of the resistance of the bacterium to antibiotics enables personalized treatment regimens to be provided, reducing costs and implementing an antibiotic stewardship program. The aims of the present narrative review were to analyze and compare the traditional and next-generation methods for diagnosing H. pylori, explain the different factors associated with eradication failure, and emphasize the impact of the increasing antibiotic resistance on the reversal and prevention of H. pylori-associated diseases.

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Contribution to journal Review article Peer-review

Original language

English

Pages from-to (Number of pages)

Pages 330-341 (12 pages)

Journal (Volume, Issue Number)

Revista de Gastroenterologia de Mexico (English Edition) (Volume 87, Issue 3)

Publication milestones

  • Published
    - 2022

Publication status

Published
- 2022

External Publication IDs

  • PubMed: 35778343