Poster Session II - A202 COMPARISON OF INVASIVE HELICOBACTER PYLORI DETECTION METHODS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING GASTROSCOPY IN A CANADIAN TERTIARY CARE CENTER
J M Duerksen, B Ramjiawan, J K Stone

TL;DR
This study compares three invasive methods for detecting Helicobacter pylori in patients and finds histopathology to be the most accurate.
Contribution
The study evaluates the accuracy of histopathology, RUT, and culture for H. pylori detection in a Canadian setting.
Findings
Histopathology had the highest accuracy for detecting H. pylori compared to RUT and culture.
Only 3.3% of cases were positive by RUT, the lowest among the three methods.
Age over 50 years was the only predictor of H. pylori prevalence and histopathology positivity.
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori (HP) is a prevalent gastrointestinal bacterium that predisposes individuals to a variety of gastrointestinal disorders. Various invasive testing methods are available including culture, rapid urease testing (RUT) and histopathology, however no gold standard exists and there is heterogeneity in the accuracy of these across various studies. To compare the accuracy of three invasive diagnostic techniques (histopathology, RUT and culture) for HP and determine predictors of positive results for each. Our secondary aim is to characterize the prevalence of HP infection in Manitoba Retrospective single center study of adult patients undergoing gastroscopy and biopsy for HP testing. For each patient, biopsies were taken for histopathological, RUT and culture. Patient demographics including age, sex, and medication use (PPI, H2RA, antibiotics and anticoagulants/NSAIDs) were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment
