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Source: DGNews  |  Posted 2 years ago

Genotypes of Patients With Helicobacter pylori Infection May be More Associated With Related Gastric Diseases Than Variants

: Presented at ASCP

By John Otrompke

CHICAGO -- November 10, 2009 -- Pathogen virulence factors of Helicobacter
pylori
do not seem to have a role in disease outcomes in African
patients, but there seems to be a relationship in host response and disease
outcome, according to a study presented here at the American Society for
Clinical Pathology (ASCP) 2009 Annual Meeting.

H pylori is a tiny delicate spiral motile bacterium, which is
common in the west but much more prevalent in equatorial regions,” said Revathi
Gunturu, MD, Department of Pathology and Medicine, Aga Khan University
Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya.

“The bacteria is transferred most commonly by the oral-faecal route, but animal
sources, water bodies, and environmental contamination are all highly suspected
to play a role in transmission as well,” said Dr. Gunturu on October 30.

While data on H pylori varies from western literature to literature
in the African setting, in Africa, H pylori infection is associated
with inflammatory conditions, such as gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, and
occasional gastric cancer. “In the past 5 years, we have seen the previous
incidence of gastric carcinoma in our hospital doubled,” said Dr. Gunturu.

For the study, Dr. Gunturu and colleagues looked for 3 polymorphisms in 290
patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for dyspepsia at Aga Khan
University Hospital. They looked for the presence of the cagA gene and
variations in the vacA gene, 2 virulence factors in the micro-organism itself,
as well as 2 interleukin genes and a tumour necrosis factor-alpha polymorphism
in the patients.

In the sample, 52.2% of patients had H pylori. Those infected with
peptic ulcer disease were the most commonly infected and in those patients, the
rate of infection was 74.2%. The interleukin-1 beta-511 allele T/T was found in
48.4% of peptic ulcer patients, as was interleukin-1RN. Outcomes analysis
revealed that 30% of gastritis cases and 10% of peptic ulcer cases were quite
severe, Dr. Gunturu added.

On the other hand, the H pylori variant genotypes showed no
inclination toward any particular pathology.

“The severity of the gastritis and peptic ulcers we’re seeing could be a result
of the interplay between the genetics of the Kenyan population and the
inflammatory response,” said Dr. Gunturu, noting that the secretion of
immunologic mediators is known to be different in Africans than in westerners.

Dr. Gunturu said that the researchers are working on a follow-up study to test
the hypothesis, involving 86 gastric cancer patients in Germany and 56 patients
in Kenya. The study, which looks at interleukin expression and H
pylori
status, should be done in about 4 months, said Dr. Gunturu.

Presentation title: Prevalence of Helicobacter pylori Infection, the
Virulence Genotypes of the Infecting Strain, and Associated Disease Outcomes in
the Kenyan Population. Abstract 42

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