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Bismuth quadruple therapy shows higher H. pylori eradication in pediatric patients with clarithromycin resistance

Bismuth quadruple therapy shows higher H. pylori eradication in pediatric patients with clarithromyc…
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Key Takeaway
Consider bismuth quadruple therapy for pediatric H. pylori infection with clarithromycin resistance, based on associative evidence.

This was a real-world retrospective analysis and prospective enrollment study of 4,610 pediatric patients with H. pylori infection treated between 2019 and 2024. The study compared bismuth quadruple therapy (BQT) to standard triple therapy (TT) for H. pylori eradication. Complete follow-up data for eradication assessment were available for 1,844 patients.

In patients with clarithromycin-resistant infections, BQT achieved a 93.1% eradication rate versus 68.8% with TT (p = 0.017). For patients with high-level resistance (MIC ≥ 16 g/mL), bismuth therapy cured 96% of cases compared to 0% with triple therapy (p < 0.001). In vitro analysis showed bismuth-clarithromycin synergy was exclusive to resistant strains and intensified with increasing MIC of clarithromycin. A baseline MIC ≥ 16 g/mL robustly predicted synergy (AUC = 0.991).

Safety and tolerability data were not reported. Key limitations include the retrospective real-world cohort analysis, the pediatric population only, and complete follow-up in only 1,844 of 4,610 patients. The association between bismuth therapy and improved eradication was reported; causation was not established. Findings are from retrospective and prospective analyses with preclinical mechanistic validation.

A MIC threshold of ≥ 16 g/mL provides a clinically actionable biomarker for resistance-guided therapy. However, generalizability to adults and long-term outcomes are not established.

Study Details

Study typeRct
Sample sizen = 4,610
EvidenceLevel 2
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Background & Aims: Clarithromycin (CLA) resistance severely compromises the efficacy of triple therapy (TT) against Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). Bismuth-based regimens exhibit greater efficacy against CLA-resistant H. pylori than against strains resistant to other antibiotics, suggesting a resistance-specific vulnerability rather than broad antimicrobial activity. The mechanistic basis for this selectivity, however, remains unknown. We hypothesized that high-level CLA resistance confers a metabolically targetable vulnerability that can be exploited by bismuth, and that a quantitative MIC of CLA threshold could identify this responsive subset. Methods: We conducted a real-world retrospective analysis of 4,610 pediatric patients with H. pylori infection treated between 2019 and 2024, among whom 1,844 (40%) had complete follow-up data for eradication assessment. In parallel, we prospectively enrolled 51 patients with culture-positive isolates--the largest liquid checkerboard panel reported to date--to evaluate bismuth-CLA interactions and track treatment outcomes. Mechanistic validation included transcriptomic profiling and functional assays of iron and ATP metabolism, with iron chelation and supplementation experiments. Results: In the retrospective real-world cohort (n = 4,610; 1,844 with follow-up), bismuth quadruple therapy (BQT) achieved superior eradication specifically in CLA-resistant infections (93.1% vs 68.8% with TT; p = 0.017). In vitro, bismuth-CLA synergy was exclusive to resistant strains and intensified with increasing MIC of CLA. Mechanistically, bismuth triggered coordinated depletion of intracellular iron and ATP--a phenotype mimicked by iron chelation and reversed by iron supplementation. A baseline MIC of CLA [&ge;] 16 g/mL robustly predicted this synergy (AUC = 0.991) and was prospectively validated in an independent patient subset: bismuth cured 96% of high-level resistant patients (MIC [&ge;] 16 g/mL) versus 0% with triple therapy (p < 0.001). Conclusion: High-level CLA resistance defines an iron-dependent metabolic vulnerability in H. pylori that is selectively targeted by bismuth. The MIC threshold of [&ge;] 16 g/mL provides the first clinically actionable biomarker for resistance-guided therapy, transforming a marker of treatment failure into a positive predictor of bismuth response. These findings establish the mechanistic and clinical foundation for MIC-stratified eradication strategies and inform future randomized trials aimed at precision management of antibiotic-resistant H. pylori infection. Keywords Helicobacter pylori; Antibiotic Resistance; Clarithromycin Resistance; Bismuth-based Therapy; Iron Metabolism
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