Effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication on gastric metaplasia of the duodenum.
Open Access
- 1 February 1995
- Vol. 36 (2) , 193-197
- https://doi.org/10.1136/gut.36.2.193
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori associated duodenal ulcers occur in patches of gastric metaplasia. The pathogenesis of gastric metaplasia is unclear, but it has been produced in experimental animals by acute injury and has been shown to be present to a greater extent of H pylori positive subjects. This study aimed to discover if gastric metaplasia regressed with eradication of H pylori or healing of duodenal ulcers, or both. Thirty two duodenal ulcer patients with H pylori infection confirmed by biopsy urease test and by antral histological examination were studied. Patients were treated with triple therapy (deNol 240 mg twice daily, amoxycillin 500 mg three times daily, and metronidazole 400 mg three times daily) for two weeks after the first endoscopy and were subsequently re-endoscoped. Three duodenal bulb biopsy specimens were obtained per patient at each endoscopy. Biopsy sections were stained with haematoxylin and eosin to determine the severity of duodenitis, and with diastase periodic acid-Schiff/alcian blue to assess the extent of gastric metaplasia. Slides were assessed by two histopathologists unaware of treatment status. H pylori was eradicated in 63% of subjects and all ulcers were healed at follow up. The median extent of gastric metaplasia at the start of treatment and 6-18 months (median 10) after treatment was compared in the two groups. Gastric metaplasia declined in eradicators from 16% to 8% (p < 0.05) while in non-eradicators there was no significant change (25% initially and at follow up). A positive relation between extent of gastric metaplasia and duodenal inflammation score was present before treatment (r(s) = 0.74, p < 0.001) and was unchanged after treatment in the non-eradicator group (r(s) = 0.89, p < 0.001). In the eradicator group, however, the inflammation score had significantly declined (p < 0.02) and the close relation with gastric metaplasia was no longer present. These results suggest that H pylori itself is at least in part responsible for producing gastric metaplasia of the duodenum.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gastric epithelium in the duodenum: its association with Helicobacter pylori and inflammation.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1990
- Helicobacter pylori infection of gastric mucin cell metaplasia: The duodenum revisitedThe Journal of Pathology, 1990
- Cure of duodenal ulcer associated with eradication of Helicobacter pyloriThe Lancet, 1990
- Induction of a novel epidermal growth factor-secreting cell lineage by mucosal ulceration in human gastrointestinal stem cellsNature, 1990
- Campylobacter pylori, duodenal ulcer, and gastric metaplasia: possible role of functional heterotopic tissue in ulcerogenesis.Gut, 1989
- Enhancement by tetragastrin of experimental induction of gastric epithelium in the duodenum.Gut, 1989
- Histologic Changes in the Gastroduodenal Mucosa after Long-Term Medical Treatment with Cimetidine or Parietal Cell Vagotomy in Patients with Juxtapyloric Ulcer DiseaseScandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology, 1988
- Campylobacter pyloridis and acid induced gastric metaplasia in the pathogenesis of duodenitis.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1987
- High Incidence of Campylobacter-Like Organisms in Endoscopic Biopsies from Patients with Gastritis, with or without Peptic UlcerDigestion, 1987
- The healing of artificial defects of the duodenal mucosaThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1935