Antimicrobial eradication rates for Helicobacter pylori have been decreasing and the reason for treatment failure was found to be resistance to one or more of the antibiotics. Clarithromycin resistance to H pylori was associated with point mutations in the 23S rRNA gene and the PCR-RFLP method can detect these point mutations. The aim of this study was to determine the molecular detection of genotypic clarithromycin-resistant strains and its effect on the eradication rate of concomitant therapy in H pylori infection. The presence of H pylori DNA was confirmed by amplifying the UreC gene by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and point mutations on 23S rRNA (A2142G and A2143G) were detected by PCR-RFLP. A total of 98 H pylori-infected patients were involved and among them, genotypic clarithromycin-sensitive strain was 93.9% and clarithromycin-resistant strain was 6.1%. All patients were found to have the A2143G point mutation but A2142G was not detected. Successful eradication rate of concomitant therapy was found to be 89.8% and unsuccessful rate was 10.2%. Among patients with the clarithromycin-resistant gene, only 16.7% had successful eradication and 83.3% had unsuccessful eradication. There was a statistically significant association between failure rate of concomitant therapy and detection of clarithromycin-resistant genes (P < 0.01). The presence of A2143G point mutation in the clarithromycin-resistant strain has a negative effect on the eradication rate of H pylori infection.
CITATION STYLE
Nyi, K. N., Soe, A. M., & Htut, Z. M. (2021). Molecular detection of genotypic clarithromycin‐resistant strains and its effect on the eradication rate of concomitant therapy in Helicobacter pylori infection. GastroHep, 3(6), 372–378. https://doi.org/10.1002/ygh2.476
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