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. 2014 Jan 8;4(1):e003689.
doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003689.

Disease manifestations of Helicobacter pylori infection in Arctic Canada: using epidemiology to address community concerns

Collaborators, Affiliations

Disease manifestations of Helicobacter pylori infection in Arctic Canada: using epidemiology to address community concerns

Justin Cheung et al. BMJ Open. .

Abstract

Objectives: Helicobacter pylori infection, linked to gastric cancer, is responsible for a large worldwide disease burden. H pylori prevalence and gastric cancer rates are elevated among indigenous Arctic communities, but implementation of prevention strategies is hampered by insufficient information. Some communities in northern Canada have advocated for H pylori prevention research. As a first step, community-driven research was undertaken to describe the H pylori-associated disease burden in concerned communities.

Design: Participants in this cross-sectional study completed a clinical interview and gastroscopy with gastric biopsies taken for histopathological examination in February 2008.

Setting: Study procedures were carried out at the health centre in Aklavik, Northwest Territories, Canada (population ∼600).

Participants: All residents of Aklavik were invited to complete a clinical interview and gastroscopy; 194 (58% female participants; 91% Aboriginal; age range 10-80 years) completed gastroscopy and had gastric biopsies taken.

Primary and secondary outcome measures: This analysis estimates the prevalence of gastric abnormalities detected by endoscopy and histopathology, and associations of demographic and clinical variables with H pylori prevalence.

Results: Among 194 participants with evaluable gastric biopsies, 66% were H pylori-positive on histology. Among H pylori-positive participants, prevalence was 94% for acute gastritis, 100% for chronic gastritis, 21% for gastric atrophy and 11% for intestinal metaplasia of the gastric mucosa, while chronic inflammation severity was mild in 9%, moderate in 47% and severe in 43%. In a multivariable model, H pylori prevalence was inversely associated with previous gastroscopy, previous H pylori therapy and aspirin use, and was positively associated with alcohol consumption.

Conclusions: In this population, H pylori-associated gastric histopathology shows a pattern compatible with elevated risk of gastric cancer. These findings demonstrate that local concern about health risks from H pylori is warranted and provide an example of how epidemiological research can address health priorities identified by communities.

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