RESUMO
AIM: To study the effects of Helicobacter pylori associated diseases and the bacterial vacA and cagA statuses on the efficacy of H. pylori eradication. METHODS: A prospective study in a consecutive series of outpatients of a gastroenterological institution and of a primary practice. A series of 146 H. pylori positive patients with peptic ulcer disease (PUD; n = 40) or nonulcer dyspepsia (NUD; n = 106) were evaluated. H. pylori vacA genotpyes and cagA status were determined directly in gastric biopsy specimens by polymerase chain reaction. The patients were treated with triple-therapy regimens consisting of a proton pump inhibitor and two antibiotics twice daily for 7 days. Reevaluation of H. pylori was determined 4-5 weeks later by endoscopy or 13C urea breath test. RESULTS: 123 patients completed the study. In 8 patients, colonization with two or more H. pylori strains was found. The overall cure rate was 84.6% (104/123). The eradication rates were significantly higher in patients with PUD (94.4%, 34/36) than in those with NUD (81.6%, 71/87; p < 0.05). In patients with cagA-positive H. pylori strains, the eradication rate was 89.0% (73/82) as compared with 78.8% (26/33) in those with cagA-negative strains (p = 0.15). The vacA genotype had no effect on the efficacy of H. pylori eradication. CONCLUSION: Using 1-week triple-therapy regimens, treatment of H. pylori infection is more effective in patients with PUD than in those with NUD.