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Are you a medical professional performing H. pylori biopsy tests?

Do you have to wait for results until the next day?

Do you have to come into the office on Saturday to read results?

Do you have to keep a record of your refrigerator temperature ONLY because of your Hp tests?

Do you need a CLIA Waived test?

Have you had a test run out in your pocket while warming?

Do you have to incubate tests for faster results?

Are you insecure how much reagent to add to the test?

Do you have ghosting?

Do you have blushing?

Does blood in the test cause incorrect readings?

If yes, we have a BIG improvement to show you. Ask for FREE SAMPLES - just send us an email with your address and telephone number:

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The No.1 Dry RUT Worldwide: 

No Refrigeration Required

No Incubation or Reagents Required

Very Fast Results (final reading at 1hour)

Easy to read Color Change (see picture below)

Cost Effective, Simple and Convenient

Sensitive and Specific for Helicobacter pylori

 

INTRODUCTION

Since the discovery of Helicobacter pylori (Hp) by Marshall and Warren in 1983 (1), overwhelming evidence has accumulated to confirm that Hp infection plays a significant role in the development of chronic active gastritis, peptic ulcer, and gastric adenocarcinoma (2-6). Hp infection is very common throughout the world, occurring in 40-50% of the population in developed countries and 80-90% of the population in developing regions (7), and about 54.4% of the people in Taiwan (8).

A large number of methods, most of which require gastric biopsies, have been used to diagnose Hp infection, but there is no single gold standard test for the diagnosis of Hp infection (9-11). Every method for detection of Hp has its own inherent advantages and disadvantages. Although biopsy based tests may suffer from sampling error (12) due to the patchy nature of the infection, rapid urease test (RUT), with its high sensitivity and specificity, is considered to be a quick and reliable test for the initial diagnosis of Hp infection. Also, RUT is simple and inexpensive (13-16). When a biopsy is incubated in a medium containing urea and a pH-sensitive color marker, urease hydrolyses urea to carbon dioxide

Hepato-Gastroenterology 2002; 49:1191-1194 and ammonia, causing a rise in pH value and a change in the color of the medium.

In the past, the reaction time of most RUTs required 30 minutes on average, may have needed more than 4 hours in some cases (17,18). Patients must know the RUT results before their next visit to the OPD. If the reaction time can be reduced to less than 10 minutes, it allows a diagnosis to be made before the patient leaves the endoscopy suite. This may save on medical expenses due to repeated visits to the clinic and reduce paper work. It may also increase the success rate of eradicating Hp, because compliance is considered a major factor in the successful treatment of Hp, compliance may improve significantly if we make an early diagnosis of Hp infection and initiate therapy (19).

The present prospective study was undertaken to evaluate the validity of RUTs containing different media. This evaluation included accuracy, reaction time and cost-effectiveness. We also wanted to evaluate the positive reaction of different RUTs in relation to various colonies of Hp, and the accuracy of different RUTs in patients who had received prior Hp eradication therapy.


ABSTRACT

Background/Aims:

The influence of different media on the validity of the rapid urease test, including accuracy, reaction time and cost-effectiveness is evaluated.

Methodology:

Biopsies were obtained from the antral and body mucosa of 100 KMUH patients (51 men, 49 women; mean age: 54.0 years, range: 21-79 years old) undergoing gastroendoscopy due to dyspepsia. None of the patients had received any Helicobacter pylori eradicating treatment, nor any other antibiotic or bismuth treatment in the previous one month, nor had they had any type of gastric operation in the past.

Helicobacter pylori status was evaluated by seven different tests: culture, histology, home-made rapid urease test, 13C-urea breath test, and three different commercially available rapid urease tests - including the CLOtest, the Pronto Dry test, and the Pyloriset Urease test. Helicobacter pylori status was denned as positive when the culture was positive or if concordance of two of the other three tests (histology, homemade rapid urease test and 13C-urea breath test) was positive.

Results:

Three different rapid urease tests have similar sensitivities (97.3% us. 100% vs. 100%) and specificities (98.4% us. 96.8% us. 98.2%), and accuracy (98.4% us. 96.8% us. 98.2%). But the reaction time was longer in the CLOtest than for the other two rapid urease tests (22.3 us. 5.6 us. 10.1 minutes) (P<0.05). The Pronto Dry test and the Pyloriset Urease test also have more rapid positive rate than CLOtest. However, in vitro study, three tests show similar rapidity of positive reaction at different densities of Helicobacter pylori.      

Conclusions:

These three tests have practical advantages for physicians who need a rapid and accurate method of diagnosing Helicobacter pylori infections. The Pronto Dry test and Pyloriset Urease test have degrees of accuracy similar to the CLOtest, but results are obtained more rapidly and they are cheaper. Furthermore, the Pronto Dry test can be stored at room temperature and thereby save on the storage expense.

 

 

blue-arrow-04_R Pronto-Dry WINNER over CLOtest!

 

 

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