BACKGROUND:Low Helicobacter pylori eradication rates are common in pediatric trials especially in developing countries. The aim of the study was to investigate the role of antibiotic resistance, drug dosage, and administration frequency on treatment outcome for children in Vietnam. MATERIALS AND METHODS:Antibiotics resistance of H. pylori was analyzed by the Etest in 222 pretreatment isolates from children 3-15 years of age who were originally recruited in a randomized trial with two treatment regiments: lansoprazole with amoxicillin and either clarithromycin (LAC) or metronidazole (LAM) in two weight groups with once- or twice-daily administration. The study design was an observational study embedded in a randomized trial. RESULTS: The overall resistance to clarithromycin, metronidazole, and amoxicillin was 50.9%, 65.3%, and 0.5%, respectively. In LAC, eradication was linked to the strains being susceptible to clarithromycin (78.2% vs 29.3%, p = .0001). Twice-daily dosage of proton-pump inhibitor (PPI) and clarithromycin was more effective for eradication than once-daily dosage for resistant strains (50.0% vs 14.7%, p = .004) and tended to be so also for sensitive strains (87.5% vs 65.2%, p = .051). Exact antibiotic dose per body weight resulted in more eradication for resistant strains (45.3% vs 8.0%, p = .006). These differences were less pronounced for the LAM regimen, with twice-daily PPI versus once daily for resistant strains resulting in 69.2% and 50.0% eradication (p = .096), respectively. CONCLUSIONS:Helicobacter pylori clarithromycin resistance was unexpectedly high in young children in Vietnam. Clarithromycin resistance was an important cause for eradication treatment failure. Twice-daily administration and exact antibiotic dosing resulted in more eradicated infections when the strains were antibiotic resistant, which has implications for the study design in pediatric H. pylori eradication trials.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Low Helicobacter pylori eradication rates are common in pediatric trials especially in developing countries. The aim of the study was to investigate the role of antibiotic resistance, drug dosage, and administration frequency on treatment outcome for children in Vietnam. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Antibiotics resistance of H. pylori was analyzed by the Etest in 222 pretreatment isolates from children 3-15 years of age who were originally recruited in a randomized trial with two treatment regiments: lansoprazole with amoxicillin and either clarithromycin (LAC) or metronidazole (LAM) in two weight groups with once- or twice-daily administration. The study design was an observational study embedded in a randomized trial. RESULTS: The overall resistance to clarithromycin, metronidazole, and amoxicillin was 50.9%, 65.3%, and 0.5%, respectively. In LAC, eradication was linked to the strains being susceptible to clarithromycin (78.2% vs 29.3%, p = .0001). Twice-daily dosage of proton-pump inhibitor (PPI) and clarithromycin was more effective for eradication than once-daily dosage for resistant strains (50.0% vs 14.7%, p = .004) and tended to be so also for sensitive strains (87.5% vs 65.2%, p = .051). Exact antibiotic dose per body weight resulted in more eradication for resistant strains (45.3% vs 8.0%, p = .006). These differences were less pronounced for the LAM regimen, with twice-daily PPI versus once daily for resistant strains resulting in 69.2% and 50.0% eradication (p = .096), respectively. CONCLUSIONS:Helicobacter pyloriclarithromycin resistance was unexpectedly high in young children in Vietnam. Clarithromycin resistance was an important cause for eradication treatment failure. Twice-daily administration and exact antibiotic dosing resulted in more eradicated infections when the strains were antibiotic resistant, which has implications for the study design in pediatric H. pylori eradication trials.
Authors: Loan Thi Thuy Le; Tuan Anh Nguyen; Nghia An Nguyen; Yen Thi Hai Nguyen; Hai Thi Be Nguyen; Liem Thanh Nguyen; Mai Tuyet Vi; Thang Nguyen Journal: Healthcare (Basel) Date: 2022-06-17
Authors: Camelia Quek; Son T Pham; Kieu T Tran; Binh T Pham; Loc V Huynh; Ngan B L Luu; Thao K T Le; Kelly Quek; Van H Pham Journal: F1000Res Date: 2016-04-13
Authors: Kinh Van Nguyen; Nga Thuy Thi Do; Arjun Chandna; Trung Vu Nguyen; Ca Van Pham; Phuong Mai Doan; An Quoc Nguyen; Chuc Kim Thi Nguyen; Mattias Larsson; Socorro Escalante; Babatunde Olowokure; Ramanan Laxminarayan; Hellen Gelband; Peter Horby; Ha Bich Thi Ngo; Mai Thanh Hoang; Jeremy Farrar; Tran Tinh Hien; Heiman F L Wertheim Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2013-12-10 Impact factor: 3.295