Current Issues in Molecular Biology (Jun 2024)

Genetic Markers of <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> Resistance to Clarithromycin and Levofloxacin in Moscow, Russia

  • Natalia Bodunova,
  • Larisa Tsapkova,
  • Vera Polyakova,
  • Irina Baratova,
  • Konstantin Rumyantsev,
  • Natalia Dekhnich,
  • Karina Nikolskaya,
  • Margarita Chebotareva,
  • Irina Voynovan,
  • Elena Parfenchikova,
  • Galina Pronina,
  • Ekaterina Chernikova,
  • Dmitry Bordin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb46070397
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 7
pp. 6665 – 6674

Abstract

Read online

The Maastricht VI/Florence consensus recommends, as one of the measures to enhance the efficacy of Helicobacter pylori infection eradication, a personalized treatment approach involving the selection of an antimicrobial agent based on the pre-determined resistance of H. pylori. To address the need to develop test systems for personalized drug selection, this study was designed to analyze the molecular resistance of H. pylori using a newly developed Sanger sequencing test platform. The characteristics of the test system were determined on 25 pure culture samples of H. pylori with known resistance. Sensitivity and specificity for detecting resistance to clarithromycin was 100% and those to levofloxacin were 93% and 92%, respectively. The test system has been tested in real clinical practice on 112 H. pylori-positive patients who had not previously received proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) or antibacterial drugs. Mutations indicating resistance to clarithromycin were found in 27 (24%) samples and those indicating resistance to levofloxacin were found in 26 (23%) samples. Double resistance was observed in 16 (14%) samples. The most common mutations leading to clarithromycin resistance were 2143G and 2142G and to levofloxacin resistance—261A and 271A in the gyrA gene, which account for 69% of all identified genetic determinants in levofloxacin-resistant bacteria. Thus, a personalized approach to the selection of H. pylori eradication therapy based on the detection of bacterial resistance before prescribing first-line therapy could help to avoid the prescription of ineffective H. pylori eradication therapies and, overall, contribute to the control of antibiotic resistance of H. pylori.

Keywords