Title Factors associated with decision to treat or not to treat Helicobacter pylori infection in children: data from the EuroPedHp registry /
Authors Le Thi, Thu Giang ; Werkstetter, Katharina ; Kotilea, Kallirroi ; Bontems, Patrick ; Cabral, José ; Cilleruelo, Maria Luz ; Kori, Michal ; Barrio, Josefa ; Homan, Matjaž ; Kalach, Nicolas ; Lima, Rosa ; Tavares, Marta ; Urruzuno, Pedro ; Misak, Zrinjka ; Urbonas, Vaidotas ; Koletzko, Sibylle
DOI 10.1111/hel.13134
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Is Part of Helicobacter.. Hoboken : Wiley. 2024, vol. 29, iss. 5, art. no. e13134, p. [1-18].. ISSN 1083-4389. eISSN 1523-5378
Keywords [eng] anti-Helicobacter pylori therapy ; celiac disease ; children ; comorbidities ; eosinophilic esophagitis ; inflammatory bowel disease
Abstract [eng] Background: European and North-American guidelines on management of H. pylori infection in children provide the option not to treat even if the infection is endoscopically confirmed. We used data from the EuroPedHp Registry to identify factors associated with therapy decisions. Methods: We included treatment-naïve patients reported between 2017 and 2020 from 30 centers in 17 European countries. Multivariable logistic regression identified factors including comorbidities within and outside the gastrointestinal (GI) tract influencing the decision for or against therapy. Results: Of 1165 patients (52% females, median age 12.8), 28% (321/1165) reported any alarm symptom, 26% (307/1165) comorbidities, and 16% (192/1165) did not receive eradication treatment. Therapy was initiated less often in children having any GI comorbidity (57%, n = 181), particularly in those with eosinophilic esophagitis (60%, n = 35), inflammatory bowel disease (54%, n = 28), and celiac disease (43%, n = 58), compared to those with non-GI (86%, n = 126) or no comorbidity (89%, n = 858), despite similar frequencies of alarm and non-alarm symptoms, ulcers, erosions, and nodular gastritis. Patients with GI and without comorbidities remained more likely untreated in high versus low H. pylori prevalence countries (p < 0.0001). In children without comorbidities, factors favoring therapy included older age, being overweight, having symptoms, erosions, antral nodularity, and available antibiotic susceptibility results. Conclusion: In this cohort, H. pylori-infected children with GI comorbidities compared to no comorbidity showed 75% reduced chance of receiving eradication therapy. We found no evidence supporting different management strategies in infected patients with GI comorbidities compared to all pediatric patients with endoscopically proven H. pylori infection.
Published Hoboken : Wiley
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2024
CC license CC license description