Helicobacter pylori Resistance to Triple Therapy in a Multicultural Population in New York City

Cureus. 2021 Nov 25;13(11):e19883. doi: 10.7759/cureus.19883. eCollection 2021 Nov.

Abstract

Introduction: Helicobacter pylori infection (HPI) has become a worldwide concern due to its associations with intestinal and extraintestinal disease including cancer, autoimmune phenomena, and vitamin deficiencies. HPI has been found to affect Hispanics at higher rates compared with non-Hispanics in the USA. Hispanics comprise most of the patient population at Metropolitan Hospital in New York City. Growing concerns about antibiotic resistance led to the reconciliation of treatment guidelines with the consensus of bismuth quadruple therapy as the first-line treatment, replacing clarithromycin-based triple therapy. We conducted a retrospective study to explore the resistance rate of Helicobacter pylori to triple therapy in patients at Metropolitan Hospital.

Objective: To explore the resistance rates of Helicobacter pylori in infected patients treated with clarithromycin-based triple therapy in Metropolitan Hospital over a five-year period.

Materials and methods: Charts of all patients who underwent upper endoscopy during a five-year period were retrospectively reviewed. Overall, 2000 patients were screened for presence of HPI. We included 322 patients with a demonstrated HPI obtained from biopsies taken during upper endoscopy within the study period. Inclusion criteria were patients older than 18 years old with positive HPI who were prescribed therapy. Exclusion criteria were patients with positive HPI who did not receive treatment for the infection and patients without a confirmatory diagnosis of infection. We further reported on three groups based on the implemented therapy. Each treated group was divided into three subgroups based on eradication testing. Treatment compliance was documented. The patient population was demographically characterized by ethnicity, age at diagnosis, body mass index (BMI), and sex.

Results: Of the 322 patients included in the study, 258 were Hispanics (80%). The eradication rate among patients treated with selected clarithromycin-based therapies was found to be statistically significant when compared with other HPI therapies. There was no statistically significant difference between the studied group with respect to age, sex, ethnicity, and BMI. In the group of patients with suspected clarithromycin resistance, antimicrobial sensitivity testing was ordered in one case.

Discussion: HPI varies with race and ethnicity. Within the USA, the prevalence is lowest among non-Hispanics. Ethnicity and age, sex, and BMI were not factors that impacted treatment outcomes. We found that triple therapy with a proton pump inhibitor, amoxicillin, and clarithromycin (PAC) was used as a first-line treatment, consistently showing a low rate of resistance. The eradication rate among patients treated with PAC was found to be statistically significant when compared with all other therapies. It is significant for the hospitals with limited resources, where initial treatment follows the "test-and-treat" strategy. Quadruple therapy as the first-line treatment raises concerns about medication costs, insurance coverage, side effects, and dosing, which may have a significant impact on patient compliance.

Conclusion: Our study showed that selected clarithromycin-based therapies were superior for HPI eradication when compared with non-clarithromycin-based triple therapy in low-resistance communities. Culture with antimicrobial susceptibility testing was used in a de minimis number of cases, which raises awareness for future study.

Keywords: antibiotic resistance (abr); antimicrobial resistance; bacterial resistance; drug susceptibility testing and antibiotic resistance; h. pylori; helicobacter pylori.