Infecting nearly half of the global adult population, Helicobacter pylori remains one of the most pervasive and consequential bacterial pathogens in modern medicine. Its role as a principal cause of gastritis, peptic ulcers, and gastric malignancies has fueled extensive research and clinical efforts aimed at effective eradication. However, longstanding challenges such as rising antibiotic resistance and poor patient compliance continue to disrupt treatment success rates globally. Recognizing these hurdles, the latest Second Beijing Consensus introduces a groundbreaking integrative framework that synthesizes Western medical protocols with Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), heralding a new era of personalized and holistic management for H. pylori-associated disease-syndromes.
Traditional eradication therapies have largely centered on proton pump inhibitor (PPI)-based antibiotic regimens. The widely endorsed 14-day bismuth-containing quadruple therapy, despite being the first-line recommendation, faces significant limitations. Antibiotic resistance, especially in regions with high antimicrobial usage like China, compromises efficacy and necessitates a more nuanced approach. This consensus underscores the importance of tailoring antibiotic choice to local susceptibility patterns, a principle that demands comprehensive microbial surveillance and judicious pharmacological stewardship to optimize outcomes.
In parallel, there is mounting evidence supporting the adjunctive application of TCM in H. pylori management. Herbal medicine exhibits multi-faceted pharmacodynamics, including bacteriostatic and bactericidal effects, biofilm disruption, and modulation of host immune responses. These properties provide a mechanistic rationale for integrating TCM into conventional therapies, potentially enhancing eradication rates while attenuating adverse effects commonly associated with antibiotics. The consensus delineates that TCM-containing quadruple therapies demonstrate efficacy comparable to standard bismuth quadruple regimens and offer superior safety profiles, an encouraging prospect for clinical adoption.
One of the hallmark features of this consensus is the refinement of therapeutic strategies addressing refractory H. pylori infections. Defined as failure after two or more recommended treatment courses, refractory cases pose clinical and microbiological challenges linked to complex bacterial adaptations and host factors. The document advocates for holistic, individualized assessment encompassing mucosal damage evaluation, treatment adherence analysis, allergenic potential, gut microbiota status, and bacterial morphological studies. This comprehensive assessment forms the backbone of a precision medicine approach tailored to the biological and psychosocial realities of each patient.
Building upon these insights, the consensus introduces the innovative “braking” strategy—a temporary cessation of antibiotic therapy designed to restore bacterial antibiotic susceptibility by allowing metabolic recalibration. This approach, coupled with staged integrative treatment phases—including pre-treatment regulation, concurrent combination therapies, and post-treatment consolidation using probiotics and mucosal protectants—reflects a paradigmatic shift from monolithic eradication efforts to dynamic, adaptive management. Such strategies hold promise in circumventing the pitfalls of repeated antibiotic exposure, including dysbiosis and diminished microbiota diversity, which have been implicated in gastrointestinal symptom persistence.
Equally transformative is the comprehensive incorporation of TCM syndrome differentiation within the framework of H. pylori treatment. Moving beyond pathogen eradication alone, the consensus embraces the TCM concept of “disease-syndrome,” identifying intricate pathological patterns such as dampness-heat, deficiency syndromes, and cold-heat complexities that influence both disease manifestations and therapeutic responses. Tailored herbal decoctions—Lian-Pu for Spleen-Stomach Dampness-Heat, Xiangsha-Liujunzi for Spleen-Stomach Deficiency, and Banxia Xiexin for Cold-Heat Complex—are recommended in alignment with specific syndrome diagnoses. This stratification underscores the personalized medicine ethos at the core of holistic integrative medicine (HIM).
The expert-driven development process underpinning this consensus bolsters its clinical relevance and rigor. Convened through two face-to-face meetings, the consensus engaged 43 seasoned clinicians from 29 institutions, each with over a decade of specialized experience in H. pylori management. Utilizing anonymous voting and a stringent 75% approval threshold, the statements reflect collective expertise and adherence to the American College of Physicians’ standards for guideline formulation. This methodological approach enhances trustworthiness and facilitates widespread clinical uptake.
Antibiotic resistance remains a central concern, with significant implications for public health and clinical outcomes. The consensus’s emphasis on susceptibility-guided therapy reflects an alignment with precision antimicrobial stewardship principles, advocating for diagnostics-driven prescriptions rather than empirical regimens. This paradigm shift may mitigate resistance emergence, minimize unnecessary antibiotic exposure, and preserve gut microbial integrity—a nexus essential for maintaining gastrointestinal homeostasis and patient quality of life.
Moreover, the consensus explicitly addresses the deleterious impact of repeated antibiotic courses on gut microbiota, linking such perturbations to dysbiosis and exacerbated gastrointestinal symptoms. The proposed integrative strategies involving probiotics and mucosal protectants seek to restore microbial equilibrium and reinforce mucosal defenses. This dual focus on pathogen eradication and microbiome preservation exemplifies HIM’s holistic philosophy, which prioritizes systemic balance alongside targeted interventions.
Tongue diagnosis—a classical TCM diagnostic tool—is highlighted as a pivotal modality for syndrome differentiation. This non-invasive, visual assessment facilitates real-time identification of disease-syndrome patterns and monitors therapeutic responses, offering clinicians a practical adjunct to biochemical and histopathological evaluations. Despite the recognized variability and subjectivity in TCM clinical trials, the consensus candidly acknowledges these limitations while championing a pragmatic framework oriented toward immediate clinical applicability rather than awaiting large-scale randomized trials.
In summary, the Second Beijing Consensus marks a pivotal advance in managing H. pylori infection by harmonizing Western medical precision with the nuanced, multifactorial wisdom of TCM. This integrative model advocates for individualized, stage-specific therapy tailored to microbial, host, and holistic syndromic parameters. By doing so, it promises to enhance eradication efficacy, minimize adverse events, and ultimately improve patient quality of life in a disease context notoriously resistant to conventional approaches alone. Its endorsement as a formal clinical guideline in China signals a broader trend toward integrative medicine models that may shape global H. pylori treatment paradigms in the years ahead.
Subject of Research: Integrative management strategies for Helicobacter pylori infection combining Western medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
Article Title: The Second Beijing Consensus on Holistic Integrative Medicine for the Management of Helicobacter pylori-associated “Disease-Syndrome”
News Publication Date: 30-Jun-2025
Web References:
DOI: 10.14218/CSP.2025.00009
Cancer Screening and Prevention Journal
Keywords: Helicobacter pylori, antibiotic resistance, Traditional Chinese Medicine, integrative medicine, gastric disease, probiotic therapy, personalized treatment, holistic management
Tags: antibiotic resistance in H. pylorieffective eradication of H. pylori-associated diseasesglobal health challenges in H. pyloriHelicobacter pylori managementherbal medicine adjunct therapyHolistic integrative medicinemicrobiome surveillance in treatmentpersonalized healthcare for peptic ulcerspharmacological stewardship strategiesSecond Beijing Consensustailored antibiotic regimensTraditional Chinese Medicine for gastritis