Author:
BRUCE M. G.,BRUDEN D. L.,MORRIS J. M.,REASONOVER A. L.,SACCO F.,HURLBURT D.,HENNESSY T. W.,GOVE J.,PARKINSON A.,SAHAGUN G.,DAVIS P.,KLEJKA J.,McMAHON B. J.
Abstract
SUMMARYWe performed a study to determine rates of reinfection in three groups followed for 2 years after successful treatment: American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) persons living in urban (group 1) and rural (group 2) communities, and urban Alaska non-Native persons (group 3). We enrolled adults diagnosed withH. pyloriinfection based on a positive urea breath test (13C-UBT). After successful treatment was documented at 2 months, we tested each patient by13C-UBT at 4, 6, 12 and 24 months. At each visit, participants were asked about medication use, illnesses and risk factors for reinfection. We followed 229 persons for 2 years or until they became reinfected.H. pylorireinfection occurred in 36 persons; cumulative reinfection rates were 14·5%, 22·1%, and 12·0% for groups 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Study participants who became reinfected were more likely to have peptic ulcer disease (P = 0·02), low education level (P = 0·04), or have a higher proportion of household members infected withH. pyloricompared to participants who did not become reinfected (P = 0·03). Among all three groups, reinfection occurred at rates higher than those reported for other US populations (<5% at 2 years); rural AI/AN individuals appear to be at highest risk for reinfection.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
37 articles.
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