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Inverse association between helicobacter pylori infection and childhood asthma in Greece: A case-control study
Authors
C. Tsigalou Konstantinidis, T.G. Cassimos, D. Karvelas, A. Grapsa, A. Tsalkidis, A. Panopoulou, M. Tsakris, A.
Publication date
1 January 2019
Publisher
Abstract
Introduction Helicobacter pylori infection is a well-established etiological factor for a variety of diseases such as peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. On the other hand, there is ongoing research suggesting that H. pylori might have a beneficial effect through a pivotal influence in the immunological response especially in asthma. The aim of the current case-control study was to evaluate the prevalence of H. pylor infection in asthmatic children. Methods Twenty-seven children with exacerbation of persistent asthma, aged 8.6±4.5 years (18 males, 9 females) and 54 age-sex-matched non-asthmatic controls were enrolled. Clinical examination and laboratory investigations were performed. Detection of H. pylori antigen (HpSA) in stool samples was performed by a commercial kit (bioNexia® kit, BioMérieux). Serum specific IgG antibodies were detected by a rapid chromatographic immunoassay (DIAsourceImmunoAssays). Serum IgE concentration was determined by electrochemiluminescence (ECL) (Roche Elecsys) and IgE levels ≥ 90 IU/mL were considered significantly elevated. Results In 3 (11.1%) of the 27 asthmatic children H. pylori infection (based on both detection of HpSA and specific IgG-Abs) was established, whereas as many as 16 of the 54 (29.6%) non-asthmatic ones were found infected (odds ratio 0.1; 95%CI, 0.039-0.305, p=0.026). Conclusions Our findings reveal an inverse relationship between H. pylori infection and children's persistent asthma in Greece. © GERMS 2019
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Last time updated on 10/02/2023