Abstract

General population-based cohort studies provide solid evidence on mass Helicobacter pylori (HP) eradication effects. Self-reported questionnaires are occasionally used in such studies to ascertain the HP eradication history. However, reports on the reliability of these questionnaires are lacking. This general population-based cohort study included 899 individuals with HP infection at the baseline survey who were reported to have eradicated it at the 5-year follow-up survey. Of these, the medical records of 280 patients were available for investigation, and the HP eradication status of 93 individuals was ascertained. Their medical records were reviewed, and the reliability of the self-reported questionnaire responses was assessed. Of the 91 individuals who successfully eradicated HP based on the medical records, 90 (98.9%) answered the self-reported questionnaire correctly, with an unweighted kappa value of 0.661 (p < 0.001). The difference between the self-reported and medical records age at eradication was within a 1-year range in most participants (86.8%). Similarly, the HP eradication procedure and the outcomes were reasonably matched. In conclusion, the responses to the self-reported HP eradication questionnaire were almost consistent with the medical records. Thus, HP eradication history assessment by a self-reported questionnaire is reliable for an epidemiological study in the general population.

Highlights

  • General population-based cohort studies provide solid evidence on mass Helicobacter pylori (HP) eradication effects

  • HP eradication status was confirmed in the medical records of 92 individuals, including 32.8% of the 280 individuals whose medical records were investigated (Table 1)

  • Differences in the reported age of eradication remained within 1 year. These results suggest that the studied self-reported questionnaire for HP eradication history is valid and a suitable tool for HP eradication history assessment in the general population

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Summary

Introduction

General population-based cohort studies provide solid evidence on mass Helicobacter pylori (HP) eradication effects. Reports on the reliability of these questionnaires are lacking This general population-based cohort study included 899 individuals with HP infection at the baseline survey who were reported to have eradicated it at the 5-year follow-up survey. The medical records of 280 patients were available for investigation, and the HP eradication status of 93 individuals was ascertained. Their medical records were reviewed, and the reliability of the selfreported questionnaire responses was assessed. Of the 91 individuals who successfully eradicated HP based on the medical records, 90 (98.9%) answered the self-reported questionnaire correctly, with an unweighted kappa value of 0.661 (p < 0.001). HP eradication history assessment by a self-reported questionnaire is reliable for an epidemiological study in the general population. The age-standardized HP infection incidence rate was estimated at 8.7 cases per 100,000 person-years, making HP the most important infectious cause of cancer ­worldwide[8]

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