| Literature DB >> 18367951 |
Victor M Cardenas1, Delfina C Dominguez, Flor A Puentes, Corinne C Aragaki, Karen J Goodman, David Y Graham, Yoshihiro Fukuda.
Abstract
Rapid immunochromatographic tests for Helicobacter pylori infection have been developed to allow "near-patient" testing. We therefore performed a pilot study to test a rapid immunochromatographic stool antigen test for the diagnosis of H. pylori infection in asymptomatic children. We tested stool specimens collected from children participating in a cohort study in the United States and Mexico. H. pylori-positive status was defined by positivity on at least 2 tests: a commercial H. pylori stool antigen enzyme immunoassay, an immunoglobulin G antibody enzyme immunoassay, and the C-urea breath test. Negative H. pylori status was defined by negative findings of all of these tests. Of 52 children (22 girls, 30 boys) 25 were H. pylori-positive, 19 H. pylori-negative, and 8 uncertain (eg, presumably negative; positive findings on 1 of the 3 noninvasive tests). The sensitivity and specificity of the new stool antigen test for those with definite H. pylori status were 100% (exact 95% CI 86.3%-100% and 82.4%-100%, respectively). This rapid stool antigen test may prove useful for point-of-care testing and epidemiological field studies. Larger prospective studies are needed in symptomatic and asymptomatic children for more precise estimates.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18367951 DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0b013e318148b688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr ISSN: 0277-2116 Impact factor: 2.839