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Garvey, Elizabeth; Rhead, Joanne; Suffian, Suffi; Whiley, Daniel; Mahmood, Farah; Bakshi, Naveen; Letley, Darren; White, Jonathan; Atherton, John; Winter, Jody Anne; Robinson, Karen
High incidence of antibiotic resistance amongst isolates of Helicobacter pylori collected in Nottingham, UK, between 2001 and 2018 Journal Article
In: J. Med. Microbiol., vol. 72, no. 11, 2023.
Abstract | Tags: amoxicillin, antimicrobial resistance, clarithromycin, Helicobacter pylori, levofloxacin, metronidazole, susceptibility testing
@article{Garvey2023-ao,
title = {High incidence of antibiotic resistance amongst isolates of
Helicobacter pylori collected in Nottingham, UK, between 2001
and 2018},
author = {Elizabeth Garvey and Joanne Rhead and Suffi Suffian and Daniel Whiley and Farah Mahmood and Naveen Bakshi and Darren Letley and Jonathan White and John Atherton and Jody Anne Winter and Karen Robinson},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
journal = {J. Med. Microbiol.},
volume = {72},
number = {11},
publisher = {Microbiology Society},
abstract = {Introduction. Helicobacter pylori is the leading cause of peptic
ulcers and gastric cancer. The most common treatment regimens
use combinations of two or three antibiotics and a proton pump
inhibitor (PPI) to suppress stomach acid. The World Health
Organization designated clarithromycin-resistant H. pylori as a
high priority pathogen for drug development, due to increasing
antibiotic resistance globally.Hypothesis/Gap Statement. There
is no routine surveillance of H. pylori primary antimicrobial
sensitivities in the UK, and published data are lacking.Aim.
This study aimed to characterize antimicrobial sensitivities of
isolates collected in Nottingham, UK, between 2001 and
2018.Methodology. Gastric biopsy samples were collected, with
informed written consent and ethics approval, from 162 patients
attending the Queen's Medical Centre in Nottingham for an upper
GI tract endoscopy. Antibiotic sensitivity was assessed using
E-Tests and a more cost-effective disc diffusion test.Results.
The clarithromycin, amoxicillin and levofloxacin disc diffusion
tests provided identical results to E-Tests on a subset of 30
isolates. Disparities were observed in the metronidazole test
results, however. In total, 241 isolates from 162 patients were
tested using at least one method. Of all isolates, 28 % were
resistant to clarithromycin, 62 % to metronidazole and 3 % to
amoxicillin, which are used in first-line therapies. For those
antibiotics used in second- and third-line therapies, 4 % were
resistant to levofloxacin and none of the isolates were
resistant to tetracycline. Resistance to more than one
antibiotic was found in 27 % of isolates. The frequency of
patients with a clarithromycin-resistant strain increased
dramatically over time: from 16 % between 2001 and 2005 to 40 % between 2011 and 2018 (P=0.011). For the same time periods,
there was also an increase in those with a metronidazole-resistant strain (from 58 to 78 %; P=0.05). The
frequencies of clarithromycin and metronidazole resistance were
higher in isolates from patients who had previously received
eradication therapy, compared to those who had not (40 % versus
77 %, and 80 % versus 92 %, respectively). Of 79 pairs of
isolates from the antrum and corpus regions of the same
patient's stomach, only six had differences in their
antimicrobial susceptibility profiles.Conclusion. Although there
was high and increasing resistance to clarithromycin and
metronidazole, there was no resistance to tetracycline and the
frequencies of amoxicillin and levofloxacin resistance were very
low.},
keywords = {amoxicillin, antimicrobial resistance, clarithromycin, Helicobacter pylori, levofloxacin, metronidazole, susceptibility testing},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
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