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Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy

Background/Aims: Curing Helicobacter pylori infection remains challenging for clinicians, as no proposed first-line therapy achieves bacterial eradication in all treated patients so that several patients need two or more consecutive treatments. Bacterial culture with antibiotics susceptibility testi...

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Autores principales: De Francesco, Vincenzo, Zullo, Angelo, Gatta, Luigi, Manta, Raffaele, Pavoni, Matteo, Saracino, Ilaria Maria, Fiorini, Giulia, Vaira, Dino
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8147614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34063624
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10050525
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author De Francesco, Vincenzo
Zullo, Angelo
Gatta, Luigi
Manta, Raffaele
Pavoni, Matteo
Saracino, Ilaria Maria
Fiorini, Giulia
Vaira, Dino
author_facet De Francesco, Vincenzo
Zullo, Angelo
Gatta, Luigi
Manta, Raffaele
Pavoni, Matteo
Saracino, Ilaria Maria
Fiorini, Giulia
Vaira, Dino
author_sort De Francesco, Vincenzo
collection PubMed
description Background/Aims: Curing Helicobacter pylori infection remains challenging for clinicians, as no proposed first-line therapy achieves bacterial eradication in all treated patients so that several patients need two or more consecutive treatments. Bacterial culture with antibiotics susceptibility testing is largely unachievable in Italy, and empiric second-line and rescue therapies are generally used. This study aimed to identify what eradication regimens perform better in Italy, following first-line therapy failure. Methods: We performed a literature search on PubMed for studies on standard therapy regimens used as second-line or rescue treatments performed in adult patients. Studies including modified drug combinations were not considered. Both intention-to-treat and per- protocol analyses were computed for each therapy subgroup. Results: Data from 35 studies with a total of 4830 patients were eventually considered. As a second-line therapy, Pylera(®) (90.6%) and a sequential regimen (89.8%) achieved eradication rates significantly higher than other therapies. For third-line therapy, a levofloxacin-based regimen and Pylera(®) achieved comparable eradication rates (88.2% vs. 84.7%; p = 0.2). Among therapies used as fourth (or more) attempts, Pylera(®) and a rifabutin-based therapy achieved 77.4% and 66.4% cure rates, respectively (p = 0.013). A therapy sequence based on the type of first-line therapy used was proposed. Conclusions: Data obtained through our review indicate that standard therapies for H. pylori eradication can be used when following an appropriate sequence, allowing clinicians to improve the cure rate without resorting to bacterial culture.
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spelling pubmed-81476142021-05-26 Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy De Francesco, Vincenzo Zullo, Angelo Gatta, Luigi Manta, Raffaele Pavoni, Matteo Saracino, Ilaria Maria Fiorini, Giulia Vaira, Dino Antibiotics (Basel) Perspective Background/Aims: Curing Helicobacter pylori infection remains challenging for clinicians, as no proposed first-line therapy achieves bacterial eradication in all treated patients so that several patients need two or more consecutive treatments. Bacterial culture with antibiotics susceptibility testing is largely unachievable in Italy, and empiric second-line and rescue therapies are generally used. This study aimed to identify what eradication regimens perform better in Italy, following first-line therapy failure. Methods: We performed a literature search on PubMed for studies on standard therapy regimens used as second-line or rescue treatments performed in adult patients. Studies including modified drug combinations were not considered. Both intention-to-treat and per- protocol analyses were computed for each therapy subgroup. Results: Data from 35 studies with a total of 4830 patients were eventually considered. As a second-line therapy, Pylera(®) (90.6%) and a sequential regimen (89.8%) achieved eradication rates significantly higher than other therapies. For third-line therapy, a levofloxacin-based regimen and Pylera(®) achieved comparable eradication rates (88.2% vs. 84.7%; p = 0.2). Among therapies used as fourth (or more) attempts, Pylera(®) and a rifabutin-based therapy achieved 77.4% and 66.4% cure rates, respectively (p = 0.013). A therapy sequence based on the type of first-line therapy used was proposed. Conclusions: Data obtained through our review indicate that standard therapies for H. pylori eradication can be used when following an appropriate sequence, allowing clinicians to improve the cure rate without resorting to bacterial culture. MDPI 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8147614/ /pubmed/34063624 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10050525 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Perspective
De Francesco, Vincenzo
Zullo, Angelo
Gatta, Luigi
Manta, Raffaele
Pavoni, Matteo
Saracino, Ilaria Maria
Fiorini, Giulia
Vaira, Dino
Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy
title Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy
title_full Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy
title_fullStr Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy
title_full_unstemmed Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy
title_short Rescue Therapies for H. pylori Infection in Italy
title_sort rescue therapies for h. pylori infection in italy
topic Perspective
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8147614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34063624
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10050525
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