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Rescue Therapies for Helicobacter pylori Infection in Foreign Patients Treated in Italy

Authors :
Angelo Zullo
Guido Antonelli
Dino Vaira
Tiziana Lazzarotto
Laura Saccomanno
Ilaria Maria Saracino
Giulia Fiorini
Claudio Borghi
Rossana Cavallo
Matteo Pavoni
Saracino IM, Pavoni M, Zullo A, Fiorini G, Saccomanno L, Lazzarotto T, Antonelli G, Cavallo R, Borghi C, Vaira D
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background and aims Helicobacter pylori prevalence remains high worldwide, especially in developing areas where infection acquisition occurs in early childhood. H. pylori eradication fails in a definite number of patients, despite one or more therapeutic attempts. Curing these patients is progressively more difficult, due to development of antibiotic resistance. While the cure rate of first-line therapies in foreigners was found to be different from that of Italians, no data are available on rescue therapies. Materials and methods Consecutive foreigner patients with H. pylori infection following at least one therapy failure were enrolled. All patients underwent upper endoscopy with gastric biopsies used for both histologic examination and culture/susceptibility test. Rescue therapies administered accordingly to susceptibility testing were rifabutin-based therapy, levofloxacin-based therapy, sequential. Pylera was prescribed regardless the resistance pattern. Results A total of 103 (M/F: 27/76, mean age: 41.9 y, range: 18 to 85) were enrolled. The overall resistance rates toward clarithromycin, metronidazole, and levofloxacin were 76.7%, 66%, and 42.7%, respectively, with triple resistance present in 33.9% of bacterial isolates. Eradication rates were 71.4% on 40 patients for rifabutin-based therapy, 82.8% on 42 cases for levofloxacin-based therapy, 75% on 11 patients treated with sequential therapy, and 100% on 10 cases who received Pylera regimen. Conclusions To our knowledge, this is the first study assessing H. pylori eradication rates in foreigner patients, who failed at least one therapeutic attempt, managed in Italy. Even by using a culture-based approach, the infection was not cured in a definite number of patients.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e6ca8f4648ef90b8d45ee6e40628820