A 5-year review of Helicobacter pylori isolated from gastric biopsies at the UK Health Security Agency Gastrointestinal Bacteria Reference Unit
Craig Swift, Claire Jenkins, Marie Anne Chattaway, Vanessa Wong, Derren Ready, Gauri Godbole

TL;DR
This study reviews H. pylori resistance to antibiotics in the UK over five years, finding high resistance to metronidazole and clarithromycin, and highlights the need for updated treatment strategies.
Contribution
The study provides up-to-date UK data on H. pylori antimicrobial resistance and emphasizes the importance of rapid testing and molecular methods for better patient outcomes.
Findings
High resistance rates to metronidazole (96.1%) and clarithromycin (82.2%) were observed in treatment-refractory patients.
Viable H. pylori recovery decreased significantly after 4 days post-collection, affecting susceptibility testing.
Molecular testing is recommended to improve patient management due to delays in traditional testing methods.
Abstract
Introduction. Helicobacter pylori colonizes large proportions of the global population and is associated with the development of gastric ulcers and cancer. Antimicrobial resistance to multiple first-line antibiotics is a major contributing factor in treatment failure. Gap statement. Within the UK, there is limited up-to-date information on antimicrobial susceptibility and resistance (AMR) rates in H. pylori. Aim. To assess increasing gastric biopsy referrals and temporal trends in antimicrobial resistance in H. pylori recovered from gastric biopsy specimens by the Gastrointestinal Bacteria Reference Unit (GBRU) over a 5-year period (2020 to 2024). Methodology. H. pylori was recovered from gastric biopsies of patients predominantly with recurrent/persistent infection, collected by endoscopy across the UK through culture on selective and non-selective agar media. Antimicrobial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Microscopic Colitis
