Decrease in prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection during a 10-year period in Brazilian children

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Abstract

Background - Decreasing prevalence of H pylori infection has been reported in some countries. Aim - To evaluate the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection in a 10-year period in children submitted to upper digestive endoscopy. Methods - It was a retrospective observational study. The records of 1,165 endoscopies performed during a 10-year period in a public hospital of the City of São Paulo, SP, Brazil, in patients up to 18-year-old. Only the first endoscopy was considered. Helicobacter pylori infection was defined by the rapid urease test, performed with one fragment of antral mucosa. Chi-square for trend has been estimated to compare Helicobacter pylori prevalence across the period. Results - The main indication for endoscopy was epigastric pain (47.4%). There were 392 patients with H pylori infection (33.6%), 12.8% being infants, 19.4% toddlers, 28.8% schoolchildren and 46.3% adolescents. Prevalence was 60.47% in the first year of the study and 30.43% in the last. Among the less than 6-year-old patients there was a decrease in infection prevalence from 25% for the 1993-6 period to 14.3% in the 2000-02 period, while among the over 12-year-old patients the decrease was from 55.5% in the first period to 39.6% in the latter. The decrease in H pylori infection prevalence was more intense within patients with epigastric pain, in which prevalence has decreased from 48.2% (92/191) in 1993-6, to 41.9% (65/155) in 1997-9 and 27.7% (57/206) in 2000-02. Conclusion - The study suggests a significant decrease in the prevalence of H pylori infection regarding the studied patients. The trend was mainly observed in the younger age group and in patients with epigastric pain.

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Kawakami, E., Machado, R. S., Ogata, S. K., & Langner, M. (2008). Decrease in prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection during a 10-year period in Brazilian children. Arquivos de Gastroenterologia, 45(2), 147–151. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0004-28032008000200011

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