A Controlled, Household-Randomized, Open-Label Trial Of The Effect That Treatment Of Helicobacter Pylori Infection Has On Iron Deficiency In Children In Rural Alaska

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES(2006)

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摘要
Background. Helicobacter pylori infection and iron deficiency are prevalent in disadvantaged populations worldwide. Previous small or uncontrolled studies have reported that successful treatment of H. pylori infection may resolve iron deficiency or anemia.Methods. We screened 68% of children 7 - 11 years old living in 10 western Alaska villages. The 219 children with iron deficiency ( serum ferritin level, < 22.5 pmol/L [< 10 mu g/L]) and H. pylori infection ( diagnosed on the basis of C-13-labeled urea breath tests) were enrolled in a household-randomized, unblinded trial. All children received iron supplementation for 6 weeks; children in the intervention group also received a 2-week course of treatment for H. pylori infection plus another 2-week course of treatment if the infection had not resolved at 2 months after treatment initiation.Results. At 2 months after treatment initiation, 32% of children in the intervention group and 39% of children in the control group had iron deficiency. At 14 months after treatment initiation, 65% of children in the intervention group and 72% of children in the control group had iron deficiency ( adjusted relative risk [ ARR], 0.90 [ 95% confidence interval {CI}, 0.74 - 1.1]); in addition, 22% of children in the intervention group and 14% of children in the control group had anemia ( ARR, 1.6 [ 95% CI, 0.86 - 2.9]). Results were similar when children were compared by H. pylori infection status.Conclusions. In a high-prevalence population, treatment and resolution of H. pylori infection did not improve isolated iron deficiency or mild anemia up to 14 months after treatment initiation.
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