Abstract

Helicobacter pylori chronically infects half of the human population and is associated with gastritis, peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. (13)C-urea breath test (UBT) is the main in vivo tool for the diagnosis of H. pylori infection. In this study, the safety and the accuracy of UBT were evaluated. A group of 492 dyspeptic patients was studied by UBT, the results were expressed as the difference over baseline at 30 min (DOB30). All patients were evaluated for systemic, gastrointestinal or allergic-type adverse reactions after ingestion of 75 mg (13)C-urea and citric acid in aqueous solution. The first 256 patients enrolled also underwent endoscopy and gastric biopsy. Patients positive on histology were considered infected. UBT was well tolerated and none of the 492 patients had any systemic or allergic-type adverse reaction. Among the 256 patients studied with histology, 116 were H. pylori positive on biopsies. Using 4 %o as cut-off value for DOB30,115 out of the 256 patients were positive on UBT, with only 2 false positive and 3 false negative. With this threshold, the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the UBT were 97.4%, 98.5%, and 98.0%, respectively. (13)C-UBT has proven to be a safe and simple, yet accurate, test for the non-invasive diagnosis and monitoring of H. pylori infection.

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