Journal of Personalized Medicine (Jun 2021)

Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing Concomitant and Tailored Therapy for Eradication of <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> Infection

  • Nikola Perkovic,
  • Antonio Mestrovic,
  • Josko Bozic,
  • Mirela Pavicic Ivelja,
  • Jonatan Vukovic,
  • Goran Kardum,
  • Zeljko Sundov,
  • Marija Tonkic,
  • Zeljko Puljiz,
  • Katarina Vukojevic,
  • Ante Tonkic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11060534
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
p. 534

Abstract

Read online

As high clarithromycin resistance (>20%) in the Split-Dalmatia region of Croatia hinders the treatment of H. pylori infection, the primary objective of this study was to compare concomitant quadruple with the tailored, personalized therapy as first-line eradication treatment of H. pylori. In an open-label, randomized clinical trial, 80 patients with H. pylori infection were randomly assigned to either concomitant (esomeprazole 40 mg, amoxicillin 1 gr, metronidazole 500 mg, clarithromycin 500 mg, twice daily for 14 days) or tailored therapy in accordance with the results of the antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Eradication status was assessed 4 weeks after treatment. Eradication rates were significantly higher in tailored group than in concomitant group both in intention-to-treat (70 vs. 92.5%, p = 0.010) and per-protocol (87.5 vs. 100%, p = 0.030) analysis in the setting of increasing antibiotic resistance (clarithromycin 37.5%, metronidazole 17.5%, dual resistance 10%). Adverse effects were more frequent in the concomitant group (32.5 vs. 7.5%, p = 0.006). Tailored therapy achieves higher eradication with a lower adverse events rate. With the increasing resistance of H. pylori strains to antibiotic treatment, eradication regimes with such characteristics should be strongly considered as a reasonable choice for first-line treatment.

Keywords