Helicobacter pylori-negative Chronic Gastritis in Children: A Systematic Review
- PMID: 35175996
- DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000003414
Helicobacter pylori-negative Chronic Gastritis in Children: A Systematic Review
Abstract
Objectives: To systematically review the current evidence on Helicobacter pylori-negative chronic gastritis including natural history, available therapies and outcomes.
Methods: Articles providing data on the prevalence, treatment or outcomes of Helicobacter pylori-negative gastritis were identified through a systematic search in the MEDLINE and EMBASE databases. All original research articles from human studies until October 31, 2021, were included.
Results: A total of 54 studies were included consisted of eosinophilic gastritis (n = 9), autoimmune gastritis (n = 11), collagenous gastritis (n = 16), focally enhanced gastritis (n = 6), lymphocytic gastritis (n = 5) and other causes including idiopathic gastritis and chronic renal failure related (n = 7). Most of the included studies were either cross-sectional or longitudinal cohorts except for collagenous gastritis, which mainly included case reports and case series. The prevalence of paediatric eosinophilic gastritis ranges between 5 and 7/100,000 and patients have generally favourable outcome with 50% to 70% clinical and histological response to either corticosteroids or elimination diets. Autoimmune gastritis and collagenous gastritis are extremely rare entities, commonly present with refractory iron deficiency anaemia, while lymphocytic gastritis is relatively common (10%-45%) in children with coeliac disease. Data on treatments and outcomes of autoimmune, collagenous, and focally enhanced gastritis are lacking with limited data implying poor response to therapy in the former 2 diagnoses.
Conclusions: Helicobacter pylori-negative gastritis is uncommonly reported, mainly in small cohorts, mixed adult-paediatric cohorts or as sporadic case reports. As common symptoms are not specific, thus not always result in an endoscopic evaluation, the true prevalence of these distinct disorders may be underestimated, and thus under reported.
Copyright © 2022 by European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition and North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition.
Conflict of interest statement
A.A. received last 3-years consultation and lectures fees from Abbvie and Takeda and Research grants from Abbvie and Janssen; E.Mi. received last 3-years grants/research supports from Nestle Italy and Nutricia Italy and received payment/honorarium for lectures from Dicofarm, Ferring and Shire-Takeda; O.B. received last 3-years consultation and lectures fees from Danone, Nutricia, and Mead Johnson; C.T. received last 3-years payment/honorarium for lectures/consultation from Sanofi, Takeda, Nestle, Nurticia, Abbvie; I.B., J.M.d.C. received last 3-years consultation and lectures fees from Abbott, Abbvie, Adacyte, Janssen, Nestle, and Norgine, M.A.B. received last 3-years consultation and lectures fees from Norgine, Coloplast, Takeda, Allergan, Mallinckrodt, Danone, HIPP, FrieslandCampina, Sensus and United Pharmaceuticals, M.D.S., J.D., E.Ma., S.S., and M.T. have no conflicts of interest to declare.
References
-
- Rugge M, Savarino E, Sbaraglia M, et al. Gastritis: the clinico-pathological spectrum. Dig Liver Dis 2021; 53:1237–1246.
-
- Kalach N, Bontems P, Koletzko S, et al. Frequency and risk factors of gastric and duodenal ulcers or erosions in children: a prospective 1-month European multicenter study. Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol 2010; 22:1174–1181.
-
- Mitsinikos F, Michail S, Liu Q. Wyllie R, Hyams J, Kay M. Gastritis, gastropathy, and ulcer disease. Pediatric Gastrointestinal and Liver Disease . Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Health Sciences; 2015. 294–308.
-
- Egbaria R, Levine A, Tamir A, et al. Peptic ulcers and erosions are common in Israeli children undergoing upper endoscopy. Helicobacter 2008; 13:62–68.
-
- El-Zimaity H, Riddell RH. Beyond Helicobacter: dealing with other variants of gastritis-an algorithmic approach. Histopathology 2021; 78:48–69.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Supplementary concepts
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials