| Literature DB >> 28575047 |
Ana Morilla1, Santiago Melón2, Marta E Álvarez-Argüelles2, Edisa Armesto3, Henar Villar1, María de Oña2.
Abstract
Traditional diagnostic assays for Helicobacter pylori detection have their limitations. Molecular methods can improve both diagnosis and understanding of gastric diseases. Here we describe an in-house quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (q-rt-PCR) for the detection of H. pylori in gastric biopsies which has been developed and has a detection limit of 10 copies, the specificity of which was tested against other gastric colonizer bacteria. In this study, 199 gastric biopsies from adults with different clinical gastric symptoms were examined. Biopsies were obtained during endoscopy and the following tests performed: rapid urease testing (RUT), culture and q-rt-PCR. H. pylori bacterial load expressed as bacterial load per 105 cells was calculated using a standard curve. H. pylori was isolated in 41% of patients, RUT was positive in 32% and bacterial genome was detected in 45% (p = 0.010). Concordance between traditional invasive microbiological methods used together and q-rt-PCR was almost 100%. Bacterial load in patients with positive RUT was significantly higher than those where it was negative (p<0.0001). There were also significant differences between bacterial load in patients with more than one positive assay versus those where only one method was positive (p = 0.006). The in-house q-PCR developed here is quick and inexpensive, and allows accurate diagnosis of H. pylori infection. It also permits normalized bacterial load quantification, which is important to differentiate between asymptomatic colonisation and infection.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28575047 PMCID: PMC5456260 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients.
| Male | Female | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean ± SD (range)) | 56.1±16.3 (14–87) | 57.6±18.6 (15–92) | 57.0±17.7 (14–92) |
| Normal/Gastritis | 30 (40.0%) | 72 (58.1%) | 102 (51.3%) |
| Gastric ulcer | 9 (12.0%) | 23 (18.5%) | 23 (16.1%) |
| Duodenal ulcer | 29 (38.7%) | 27 (21.8%) | 56 (28.1%) |
| Healed ulcer | 7 (9.3%) | 2 (1.6%) | 9 (4.5%) |
All the data were anonymised.
Nucleotide sequences of primers and probes.
| Primers and Probes | Sequences | |
|---|---|---|
| UreA | Forward target DNA primer | |
| Reverse target DNA primer | ||
| Target DNA probe | ||
| Beta | Forward target DNA primer | |
| Reverse target DNA primer | ||
| Target DNA probe |
Fig 1Standard curve of H. pylori q-PCR assay.
H. pylori results by different diagnostic test according to result of endoscopy.
| Endoscopic findings | Normal/Gastritis | Gastric ulcer | Duodenal ulcer | Healed ulcer | TOTAL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| q-PCR | 42 (41%) | 15 (47%) | 31 (55%) | 2 (22%) | 90 (45%) |
| Culture | 37 (36%) | 14 (44%) | 28 (50%) | 2 (22%) | 81 (41%) |
| RUT | 30 (29%) | 10 (31%) | 22 (39%) | 2 (22%) | 64 (32%) |
| Culture+RUT | 41 (40%) | 15 (47%) | 31 (55%) | 2 (22%) | 89 (45%) |
p = 0,010
Fig 2Percentage of biopsies testing positive for H. pylori.
Concordance between diagnostic tests.
| Culture | RUT | Culture+RUT | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative | |
| 80 (40%) | 10 (5%) | 63 (32%) | 27 (14%) | 88 (44%) | 2 (1%) | |
| 1 (0.5%) | 108 (54%) | 1 (0.5%) | 108 (54%) | 1 (0.5%) | 108 (54%) | |
Fig 3Relationship between average H. pylori bacterial load and endoscopic findings, sex and age.
Fig 4Comparison of average H. pylori DNA between different diagnostic tests.