Abstract

This study examined whether reinfection or recrudescence accounts for the reappearance of Helicobacter pylori infection after apparent successful eradication. In a prospective study, 173 patients cured from H. pylori infection underwent follow-up endoscopies, with biopsies for culture and histopathology, every 3 months during the first year after treatment. Subsequently, elective half-yearly endoscopies were performed in 124 patients; the remaining 49 underwent follow-up endoscopy only in 1995. At reappearing infection, DNA profiles of pretreatment and recurrent strains were compared. After 3.5 years (range, 1.0–9.2), H. pylori infection recurred in 9 patients (5.2%). Reappearing infections were classified as endoscopically transmitted reinfection (n = 2), unclassified because of loss of pretreatment isolate (n = 1), or recrudescence (identical DNA patterns before and after treatment; n = 6). The reappearance rate of infection, discarding endoscopic transmission, was 1.2% (7/601 H. pylori-negative patient-years). There was virtually no reinfection with H. pylori after eradication in this adult Western population. These data do not rule out acquisition of H. pylori.

This content is only available as a PDF.
You do not currently have access to this article.