Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2021)

Diagnosis of <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> Infection in a Routine Testing Workflow: Effect of Bacterial Load and Virulence Factors

  • Nabil Gastli,
  • Margaux Allain,
  • Dominique Lamarque,
  • Vered Abitbol,
  • Annick Billoët,
  • Gislène Collobert,
  • Romain Coriat,
  • Benoit Terris,
  • Nicolas Kalach,
  • Josette Raymond

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10132755
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 13
p. 2755

Abstract

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Reliable diagnostic methods are mandatory for effective management of Helicobacter pylori infection. Histology and culture are the most common invasive methods in current practice, even if molecular methods are gaining in importance. The performance of these conventional methods varies significantly. We conducted a retrospective study of 1540 adults and 504 children with gastric biopsies taken during endoscopy to assess the impact of bacterial load and the cagA virulence factor on the performance of H. pylori infection testing. The association between virulence and histology findings was also investigated. With 23S rRNA qPCR confirmed by glmM amplification as the gold standard, culture and histology had lower sensitivity, 74.4% and 73.3%, respectively. However, their sensitivity was enhanced (>90%) in biopsies with high bacterial load (qPCR Ct cagA status of the strain was associated with high bacterial load (94.9%), thus resulting in more frequent positive culture (94.3%) and H. pylori histology detection (91.7%) and more severe lesions on histology (p cagA status of the strains was negative in 110/119 (92.4%) of biopsies with low bacterial load (qPCR Ct H. pylori histology detection and 119/131 (90%) with negative culture findings (p H. pylori quantification associated with cagA genotyping in routine workflow are essential for a sensitive and reliable diagnosis, to identify patients at high risk and to manage eradication therapies.

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