Abstract
Background and aimsConstipation is one of the most common nonmotor symptoms (NMSs) of Parkinson's disease (PD). The infection rate of Helicobacter pylori (HP) is greater in PD patients. This study was a multicenter prospective cohort study in which propensity score matching (PSM) was used to determine whether HP infection was a risk factor for constipation in patients with PD. MethodsA total of 932 PD patients with 13C‐urea breath test for HP were included in the study. The PSM was estimated with the use of a nonparsimonious multivariate logistic regression model, with HP infection as the dependent variable and all the baseline characteristics as covariates. A total of 697 patients composed the study cohort, including 252 (36.2 %) patients in the HP-positive (HPP) group and 445 (63.8 %) patients in the HP-negative (HPN) group. Before PSM, there were differences in several of the baseline variables between the two groups. After PSM, 250 HPP patients were matched with 250 HPN patients and the standardized differences were less than 0.1 for all variables. ResultsThe present results demonstrate that HP infection is a risk factor for constipation in patients with PD [RR (95 % CI) 1.412 (1.155–1.727), P < 0.001]. Subgroup analyses revealed that HP infection was both a risk factor for constipation in Hoehn-Yahr scale (1,1.5) group and Hoehn-Yahr scale (2–5) group [OR (95 % CI) 1.811 (1.079–3.038), P < 0.025; OR (95 % CI) 2.041 (1.177–3.541), P < 0.011]. ConclusionsThe results of our prospective cohort study suggest that Helicobacter pylori infection is a risk factor for constipation in patients with PD. Trial registrationChiCTR2300071631.
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