Abstract
Triple antimicrobial therapy that includes metronidazole has been recommended as a first-line therapy for Helicobacter pylori because it has the highest eradication rates. However, resistance in H. pylori to metronidazole has been reported worldwide and its presence may reduce the efficacy of triple therapy. Various methods for testing H. pylori against metronidazole have been used including agar dilution, disk diffusion and the Etest but there has been little standardization of methods. One hundred isolates of H. pylori from different patients were tested for susceptibility to metronidazole by agar dilution, Etest and disk diffusion (5 μg disk). The agar dilution results confirmed the MIC susceptibility breakpoint to be ⩽8 μg/ml. Using this breakpoint there was close agreement (98%) between Etest and agar dilution results. For susceptible strains, MICs by E-test were generally one twofold dilution lower. Using the error-rate bounded method, agreement between disk diffusion zome diameter and MIC was 98% for agar dilution with breakpoints of ⩾12 mm and ⩽8 μg/ml and 100% for Etest with breakpointsof ⩾12 mm and ⩽8 μg/ml. The Etest discriminated better than agar dilution between susceptible and resistant strains and was simple to perform. The disk diffusion test is a reliable and cheaper alternative to the Etest with susceptibility being a zone diameter ⩾12 mm with a 5 μg disk. The prevalence of metronidazole resistance in this study was 40% by Etest.
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