H.pylori gastritis guideline recommendation

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Yamuna Kondapally, M.B.B.S[2]

Overview

American collage of gastroenterology guidelines for the management of Helicobacter pylori infection.

ACG recommendations

Diagnosis

Recommendation
  • Testing for H. pylori infection is indicated in patients with active peptic ulcer disease, a past history of documented peptic ulcer, or gastric MALT lymphoma.
  • The test-and-treat strategy for H. pylori infection is a proven management strategy for patients with uninvestigated dyspepsia who are under the age of 55 yr and have no “alarm features” (bleeding, anemia, early satiety, unexplained weight loss, progressive dysphagia, odynophagia, recurrent vomiting, family history of GI cancer, previous esophagogastric malignancy).
Indications for Diagnosis and Treatment of H.pylori Infection
Established
  • Active peptic ulcer disease (gastric or duodenal ulcer)
  • Confirmed history of peptic ulcer disease (not previously treated for H. pylori)
  • Gastric MALT lymphoma (low grade)
  • After endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer
  • Uninvestigated dyspepsia (depending upon H. pylori prevalence)
Controversial
  • Nonulcer dyspepsia
  • Gastroesophageal reflux disease
  • Persons using nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs
  • Unexplained iron deficiency anemia
  • Populations at higher risk for gastric cancer


Diagnostic Testing for H.pylori Infection

Endoscopic testing Advantages Disadvantages
*1. Histology Excellent sensitivity and specificity Expensive and requires infrastructure and trained personnel
*2. Rapid urease testing Inexpensive and provides rapid results. Excellent specificity and very good sensitivity in properly selected patients Sensitivity significantly reduced in the posttreatment setting
*3. Culture Excellent specificity. Allows determination of antibiotic sensitivities Expensive, difficult to perform, and not widely available. Only marginal sensitivity
*4. Polymerase chain reaction Excellent sensitivity and specificity. Allows determination of antibiotic sensitivities Methodology not standardized across laboratories and not widely available
Nonendoscopic testing Advantages Disadvantages
1. Antibody testing (quantitative and qualitative) Inexpensive, widely available, very good NPV PPV dependent upon background H. pyloriprevalence. Not recommended after H. pyloritherapy
*2. Urea breath tests (13C and 14C) Identifies active H. pylori infection. Excellent PPV and NPV regardless of H. pylori prevalence. Useful before and after H. pylori therapy Reimbursement and availability remain inconsistent
*3. Fecal antigen test Identifies active H. pylori infection. Excellent positive and negative predictive values regardless of H. pylori prevalence. Useful before and after H. pylori therapy Polyclonal test less well validated than the UBT in the posttreatment setting. Monoclonal test appears reliable before and after antibiotic therapy. Unpleasantness associated with collecting stool
*The sensitivity of all endoscopic and nonendoscopic tests that identify active H. pylori infection is reduced by the recent use of PPIs, bismuth, or antibiotics

PPI = proton pump inhibitor; PPV = positive predictive value; NPV = negative predictive value; UBT = urea breath test.

Treatment of H.pylori Infection