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Featured researches published by R. Caliskan.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2015

Antimicrobial resistance of Helicobacter pylori strains to five antibiotics, including levofloxacin, in Northwestern Turkey

R. Caliskan; Hrisi Bahar Tokman; Yusuf Erzin; Suat Saribas; Pelin Yuksel; Bora Kazim Bolek; Ecehan Ozge Sevuk; Mehmet Demirci; Ozge Yılmazli; Ozer Akgul; Fatma Kalayci; Hüseyin Çakan; Barik A. Salih; Kadir Bal; Bekir Kocazeybek

INTRODUCTION Antibiotic resistance is the main factor that affects the efficacy of current therapeutic regimens against Helicobacter pylori. This study aimed to determine the rates of resistance to efficacy clarithromycin, amoxicillin, tetracycline, levofloxacin and metronidazole among H. pylori strains isolated from Turkish patients with dyspepsia. METHODS H. pylori was cultured from corpus and antrum biopsies that were collected from patients with dyspeptic symptoms, and the antimicrobial susceptibility of H. pylori was determined using the E-test (clarithromycin, amoxicillin, tetracycline, metronidazole and levofloxacin) according to the EUCAST breakpoints. Point mutations in the 23S rRNA gene of clarithromycin-resistant strains were investigated using real-time PCR. RESULTS A total of 98 H. pylori strains were isolated, all of which were susceptible to amoxicillin and tetracycline. Of these strains, 36.7% (36/98) were resistant to clarithromycin, 35.5% (34/98) were resistant to metronidazole, and 29.5% (29/98) were resistant to levofloxacin. Multiple resistance was detected in 19.3% of the isolates. The A2143G and A2144G point mutations in the 23S rRNA-encoding gene were found in all 36 (100%) of the clarithromycin-resistant strains. Additionally, the levofloxacin MIC values increased to 32 mg/L in our H. pylori strains. Finally, among the clarithromycin-resistant strains, 27.2% were resistant to levofloxacin, and 45.4% were resistant to metronidazole. CONCLUSIONS We conclude that treatment failure after clarithromycin- or levofloxacin-based triple therapy is not surprising and that metronidazole is not a reliable agent for the eradication of H. pylori infection in Turkey.


Transfusion and Apheresis Science | 2011

New approaches to in vitro diagnosis of hepatitis C infection a reason for post transfusion hepatitis: Diagnostic value of determination of hepatitis C virus core antigen

Pelin Yuksel; R. Caliskan; Sevgi Ergin; Mustafa Aslan; Deniz Gozde Celik; Suat Saribas; Tevhide Ziver; Altan Yalciner; Bekir Kocazeybek

In between the dates of February 2008-March 2009, by applying to Istanbul University CTF Microbiology and Clinical Microbiology Basic Sciences Branch and Duzen laboratories, 123 cases, where HCV RNA and anti-HCV positivity are identified with molecular (real-time PCR) and serologic (ELISA) methods as a positive control group, and 48 cases where HCV RNA and anti-HCV negativity are identified as a negative control group are established. The values of sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative approximation of recently developed HCV Core Ag (Abbott Diagnostics, Germany) kit are determined successively as 94.3%, 97.9%, 99.1%, 87%, 95.3% and 88%. Although the new HCV Ag assay is clearly not sensitive enough to replace HCV NAT it may serve as a valuable tool in the HCV diagnostic algorithm as it is able to pick up a great majority of anti-HCV and HCV RNA positive samples, thus allowing a timely and less expensive serological diagnosis of an active HCV infection. This may be an advantage for labs that do not have access to PCR easily.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2015

Isolation and diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori by a new method: microcapillary culture.

Adil M Allahverdiyev; Melahat Bagirova; R. Caliskan; Hrisi Bahar Tokman; Hayat Aliyeva; Gokce Unal; Olga Nehir Oztel; Emrah Sefik Abamor; Hilal Toptas; Pelin Yuksel; Fatma Kalayci; Mustafa Aslan; Yusuf Erzin; Kadir Bal; Bekir Kocazeybek

AIM To investigate the performance of the microcapillary culture method (MCM) in Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) isolation and diagnosis. METHODS Microcapillary culture (MC), classical culture (CC), rapid urease (CLO) test, and histopathologic examination (HE) were performed with biopsy samples. Homogenized biopsy samples were loaded into capillary tubes and incubated for 48 h at 37 °C without providing a microaerophilic environment. Additionally, three or four loops of the homogenized sample were inoculated in a ready-to-use selective medium (Becton Dickinson, Helicobacter Agar, Modified) specific for the isolation of H. pylori and incubated at 37 °C in a microaerophilic atmosphere provided by CampyGen (Becton Dickinson, GasPack). Bacteria reproducing in microcapillary tubes were evaluated in an inverted microscope and also were evaluated after performing a CC with the content. Results obtained by CC, CLO test, and HE were compared with those of MC. The diagnostic performances of the methods used in this study were evaluated for specificity, sensitivity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and CI. RESULTS H. pylori was found positive by CLO test + HE and/or CC culture in 26 patient antrum and corpus biopsy samples. In 25 (25/26) patient biopsy samples, H. pylori was isolated by MCM, whereas in only 14 (14/26) patient biopsy samples, H. pylori was isolated by CC. CLO test and HE were found positive in 17 (17/26) patient biopsy samples. Comparing the results of the isolation of H. pylori by MCM, CC, CLO test, and HE, the sensitivity of the MCM was found as 96%, the specificity as 80%, the PPV as 83%, the NPV as 95%, and the 95%CI as 0.76 (χ (2) = 31.51, P < 0.01) whereas the sensitivity of the CC was found as 54% (χ (2) = 19.15, P < 0.01), and the sensitivity of the CLO test and HE were found as 65% (χ (2) = 25.26, P < 0.01). CONCLUSION This new microcapillary cultivation method for H. pylori has high diagnostic sensitivity compared with CC, HE, and CLO tests.


The Turkish journal of gastroenterology | 2015

The cytokine response in THP-1 (monocyte) and HL-60 (neutrophil-differentiated) cells infected with different genotypes of Helicobacter pylori strains.

R. Caliskan; Sayı Yazgan A; Hrisi Bahar Tokman; Sofyalı E; Yusuf Erzin; Ozer Akgul; Kurt A; Fatma Kalayci; Tevhide Ziver; Pelin Yuksel; Kadir Bal; Bekir Kocazeybek

BACKGROUND/AIMS Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a microaerophilic bacterium related with peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. Its virulence factors include cytotoxin-associated gene A (CagA) and vacuolating cytotoxin gene A (VacA) proteins. Cytokine release inducted by H. pylori colonization has an important role in pathogenesis of H. pylori. The severity of gastric pathologies depends on the H. pylori genotypes found in different geographical regions. We aimed to determine the relationship between different H. pylori genotypes and their effects on the cytokine release levels. MATERIALS AND METHODS ureC, cagA, vacAs1/s2, vacAm1/m2, and blood group antigen-binding adhesion protein A2 (babA2) virulence related genes were investigated in 21 H. pylori strains. Genotyping of 21 strains were made due to the presence of cagA, vacAs1/s2, vacAm1/m2, and babA2 genes. The H. pylori strains were cultured together with THP-1 and neutrophil-differentiated Human promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60) cells. The levels of cytokines interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and IL-10 in these cells were measured after co-culturing with H. pylori strains. RESULTS The following five different genotypes were detected: Genotype1: cagA and vacAs1m2; Genotype2: cagA and vacAs1m1; Genotype3: cagA, vacAs1m2, and babA2; Genotype4: vacAs2m2; and Genotype5: cagA and vacAs2m2. All these genotypes significantly induced the levels of IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL 10, and TNF-α in THP-1 cells. Genotype 5 caused higher amounts of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, and IL-10, whereas genotype 1 induced the highest levels of IL-8. In neutrophil-differentiated HL-60 cells, genotype 4 increased IL-6 levels and genotype 3 and 4 elevated IL-8 levels significantly. CONCLUSION These results suggested that cytokine response of the host varies depending on the specific immune response of the host against different H. pylori strains.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Neopterin and Soluble CD14 Levels as Indicators of Immune Activation in Cases with Indeterminate Pattern and True Positive HIV-1 Infection

Hayriye Kirkoyun Uysal; Pari Sohrabi; Zafer Habip; Suat Saribas; Emre Kocazeybek; Fatih Seyhan; R. Caliskan; Esad Bonabi; Pelin Yuksel; Ilhan Birinci; Omer Uysal; Bekir Kocazeybek

Background We aimed to evaluate the roles of the plasma immune activation biomarkers neopterin and soluble CD14 (sCD14) in the indirect assessment of the immune activation status of patients with the indeterminate HIV-1 (IHIV-1) pattern and a true HIV-1-positive infection (PCG). Methods This cross-sectional and descriptive study included eighty-eight patients with the IHIV-1 pattern, 100 patients in the PCG, and 100 people in a healthy control group (HCG). Neopterin and sCD14 levels were determined by competitive and sandwich ELISA methods, respectively. Results Mean neopterin and sCD14 levels among those with the IHIV-1 pattern were significantly lower than among the PCG (p < 0.001 and p = 0.001, respectively), but they were similiar to those in the HCG (p = 0.57 and p = 0.66, respectively. Mean neopterin and sCD14 levels among the PCG were found to be significantly higher than among those with the IHIV-1 pattern (p < 0.001 and p = 0.001, respectively) and among those in the HCG (p = 0.001, p < 0.001, respectively). Neopterin did not have adequate predictive value for identifying those in the PCG (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.534; 95% CI, 0.463–0.605; p = 0.4256); sCD14 also had poor predictive value but high specificity (100%) for identifying those in the PCG (AUC = 0.627; 95% CI, 0.556–0.694; p = 0.0036). Conclusions While low levels of these two biomarkers were detected among those with the IHIV-1 pattern, they were found in high levels among those in the PCG. These two markers obviously cannot be used as a sceening test because they have low sensitivies. Taken together, we suggest that neopterin and sCD14 may be helpful because they both have high specificity (92%-100%) as indirect non-specific markers for predicting the immune activation status of individuals, whether or not they have true positive HIV-1.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2015

Patterns of EPIYA motifs among cagA-positive Helicobacter pylori strains: a case–control study in a Turkish population with Eurasian geographical features

Bekir Kocazeybek; R. Caliskan; Erdamar Cetin S; Sevgi Ergin; Kuskucu M; Kepil N; Oyku Dinc H; Ziya Erzin Y; Suat Saribas; Bahar Tokman H; Fatma Kalayci; Ozer Akgul; Pelin Yuksel; Asiye Karakullukcu; Tevhide Ziver; Serhat Sirekbasan; Caglar E; Kadir Bal

Geographical variation in the frequency of various gastroduodenal pathologies was shown to be related to the geographical diversity of H. pylori CagA Glu-Pro-Ile-Tyr-Ala (EPIYA) patterns. We examined the EPIYA patterns of H. pylori and the association of EPIYA patterns with gastric cancer (GC) for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, in Turkey. The patient group (PG) contained 60 patients [38 GC and 22 duodenal ulcer (DU) patients]. The control group (CG) was 110 individuals [94 gastritis patients and 16 persons with a normal gastrointestinal system (NGIS)]. Specific primers were used for the detection of cagA including empty-site-positive and EPIYA-A, -B, -C, -D PCR. Bands of EPIYA-A, -B, -C were confirmed by DNA sequencing. One hundred and forty-two (83.5 %) strains [60 in the PG (38 GC, 22 DU), 82 in the CG (72 gastritis, 10 NGIS)] were positive for the cagA gene. EPIYA-C with multiple repeats was detected in 34 (23.9 %) strains, and 22 (64.7 %) were from GC patients. EPIYA-C with one repeat was detected in 89 (62.7 %) strains, and 54 (60.7 %) were from gastritis patients. EPIYT was detected in 10 strains, and EPIYA-D was not detected. The number of EPIYA-C with multiple repeats was significantly higher for the PG than for the CG (P < 0.0001). In GC patients, the number of EPIYA-C with multiple repeats was significantly higher than one repeat (P < 0.0001). In conclusion, our study showed that multiple EPIYA-C repeats increases the GC risk by 30.6-fold and the DU risk by 8.9-fold versus the CG. This indicates that Western-type H. pylori strains in Turkey have similar EPIYA motifs to those of neighbouring countries and Western populations.


African Health Sciences | 2018

Problems encountered in conventional HIV 1/2 Algorithms: lack of necessity for immunoblot assays to confirm repeated ELISA reactive results

Pelin Yuksel; Suat Saribas; Mert Ahmet Kuskucu; Sibel Islak Mutcali; Erdogan Kosan; Zafer Habip; Mehmet Demirci; Eda Salihoglu Kara; Ilhan Birinci; R. Caliskan; Harika Oyku Dinc; Kenan Midilli; Tevhide Ziver; Bekir Kocazeybek

Background The use of conventional (serologically based) HIV 1/2 diagnostic algorithms has become controversial in recent years. Objectives Sera from patients who underwent verification tests were evaluated because repeated ELISA-reactive results demonstrated a HIV1+HIV2 positive band pattern. Methods The line immunoassay (LIA) test was used for repeated HIV enzyme immunoassays (EIA)-reactive sera in patients at three centers. The Bio-Rad Geenius™ HIV 1/2 and the HIV-1 RNA tests were used. HIV-1 and RNA HIV-2 were investigated using PCR. Results LIA was used to evaluate 3,224 out of 10,591 samples with repeated ELISA reactivity (30%). We found that 32 (1%) of the sera, along with HIV1 bands and HIV2 gp36 bands, were positive. Only 28 of the 32 verified serum samples with gp36 bands were repeated, and no gp36 band positivity was detected using the Bio-Rad Geenius™ HIV-1/2 confirmatory assay in these serum samples. The HIV-2 proviral DNAs were also negative. Therefore, we excluded the possibility of HIV1+2 co-infection. All samples from the 32 patients were positive for HIV-1 RNA. Conclusion Our findings highlight the need to exclude confirmatory tests like the LIA test from the current diagnostic HIV algorithm and replace it with rapid HIV-1 and HIV-2 confirmatory immunochromotographic tests.


Allergologia Et Immunopathologia | 2017

The protective role of Helicobacter pylori neutrophil-activating protein in childhood asthma

Asiye Karakullukcu; Hrisi Bahar Tokman; S. Nepesov; Mehmet Demirci; Suat Saribas; S. Vehid; R. Caliskan; Zeynep Taner; H. Cokugras; T. Ziver; S. Demiryas; Bekir Kocazeybek

BACKGROUND Helicobacter pylori quantity and HP-NAP gene expression were evaluated in the faeces of healthy and asthmatic children. METHODS H. pylori DNAs and RNAs were isolated from the stool samples of 92 asthmatic children (AC; 3-8 years) and 88 healthy controls (HC). Quantitative PCR was used to determine the quantity of H. pylori and HP-NAP expression relative to the 16S rRNA (reference gene). Gene expression was analysed using the delta delta-Ct method. RESULTS H. pylori DNA was detected in the stool samples of 18 (20.4%) of the 88 HC (p<0.0001, OR=0.79) and none of AC. No meaningful statistical differences were found between individuals with positive and negative family histories for asthma in AC and HC (p>0.05). H. pylori quantity was higher in seven of 18 H. pylori-positive samples, but HP-NAP expression levels were low in four of these seven samples. Based on a multivariate logistic regression analysis of these three variables together, only males displayed a significant difference based on gender differences (p<0.02) and it was determined that, based on the OR value of 0.46 and the 95% CI range of 0.241-0.888, male gender was an independent protective factor in asthma. CONCLUSIONS HP-NAP levels vary to the relative concentrations of bacteria in the stationary or late logarithmic phases. Different napA expression levels may be caused by different endogenous napA gene expression or different environmental conditions.


Acta Virologica | 2017

Neopterin and soluble CD14 levels as indicators of immune activation in cases with low anti-HCV reactivity and true HCV infection

Zafer Habip; P. Sohrabi; Suat Saribas; R. Caliskan; Mehmet Demirci; Asiye Karakullukcu; K. Atalik; Pelin Yuksel; Omer Uysal; Erdogan Kosan; H. Bahar Tokman; Bekir Kocazeybek

Neopterin and soluble CD14 (sCD14) are detected at high levels in hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. We aimed to evaluate the role of these plasma immune activation biomarkers, for the indirect assessment of immune activation status of patients with low anti-HCV reactivity and a HCV infection. Low anti-HCV reactivity group (LRG, n: 70), true positive HCV infection group (THG, 30) and healthy control group (HCG, 30) were analyzed in this study. We have used ELISA, HCV RIBA/LIA and HCV-RNA methods. Mean neopterin levels were significantly lower in LRG than THG (p <0.001). In contrast, those values were not significantly different from those of HCG (p >0.05). Mean sCD14 were significantly higher in LRG than THG and HCG (p <0.05, p <0.001). Values of 3.95 μg/ml and 5.36 nmol/l for sCD14 and neopterin resulted in the maximum area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC), which were 0.859 (95% CI, 0.745 to 0.935; <0.0001) and 0.788 (95% CI, 0.663 to 0.883; <0.0001), respectively. These cut-offs corresponded to a sensitivity of 73.3% and a specificity of 73.3% for neopterin and of 100% and 76.7% for sCD14. Our results suggest that a specific immunoactivation might be caused by true positive HCV infection. Due to the significant results sCD14 in LRG might be non-specifically affected by some underlying atypical immunohematological pathologies. Only neopterin might be used to exclude low anti-HCV reactivity from a true HCV infection. The use of neopterin but not sCD14 in combination with fourth-generation EIA/CMIA combo tests will be useful when nucleic acid tests are not available for screening blood donors at blood banks.


African Journal of Microbiology Research | 2013

Relationship between aneurysm and microorganism: Is Helicobacter pylori a primer agent or has an affinity to the tissue?

Bekir Kocazeybek; Pelin Yuksel; Deniz Gozde Celik; Ahmet Yavuz Balci; Ali Abdelkareem; Sevgi Ergin; Vedat Koksal; Mustafa Aslan; Suat Saribas; R. Caliskan; Hüseyin Çakan; Tevhide Ziver; Arif Kaygusuz; Ibrahim Yekeler; Hrisi Bahar Tokman

1 Department of Medical Microbiology, Cerrahpasa Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkey. 2 Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Training and Research Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey. 3 Medical Faculty, Sifa University, Izmir, Turkey. 4 Faculty of Engineering, Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey. 5 Department of Microbiology, Forensic Sciences Institute, Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkey.

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