Abstract

Helicobacter pylori infection is acquired primarily during childhood and carries a significant lifetime risk for morbidity. In developing countries, approximately 70% of children are infected with the bacterium by their 15th birthday. In the United States, the rate of H pylori infection among children varies widely—approximately 10% of all 10-year-olds are infected; however, this figure is substantially higher among populations of immigrant children and children born of recent immigrants to the United States. H pylori transmission is primarily “person-to-person” via fecal-oral, gastric-oral, or oral-oral routes, with evidence suggesting contaminated water as a potential source of infection. Risk factors for infection in childhood include an infected family member, having ≥2 siblings, crowded living conditions, lower socioeconomic means, and attendance at a daycare facility. The natural history of H pylori infection includes an increased lifetime risk for peptic ulcer and gastric adenocarcinoma or lymphoma. In children and adults who develop H pylori–related peptic ulcer, cure of the infection is associated with a <5% rate of ulcer recurrence. The ideal mode of H pylori detection among children is unclear—currently available serology and whole blood tests are unreliable, while the urea breath test and stool antigen tests have not been studied adequately. Children with confirmed H pylori–related peptic ulcer disease, iron-deficiency (sideropenic) anemia, or a first-degree relative with gastric cancer should be treated for the infection using 1 of 3 available 10- to 14-day triple therapy regimens recommended by the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition.

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