| Literature DB >> 20356368 |
Mohammed Mahdy Khalifa1, Radwa Raed Sharaf, Ramy Karam Aziz.
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori is one of the human pathogens with highest prevalence around the world; yet, its principal mode of transmission remains largely unknown. The role of H. pylori in gastric disease and cancer has not been established until the end of the 20th century. Since then, its epidemiology has been extensively studied, and an accruing body of literature suggests that not all humans are equally at risk of infection by this gut pathogen. Here, we briefly review the different epidemiological aspects of H. pylori infection with emphasis on those factors related to human poverty. The epidemiology of H. pylori infection is characterized by marked differences between developing and developed countries, notably among children. In addition, congruent lines of evidence point out to socioeconomic factors and living standards as main determinants of the age-dependent acquisition rate of H. pylori, and consequently its prevalence. These data are alarming in the light of the changing global climate and birth rate, which are expected to change the demography of our planet, putting more children at risk of H. pylori and its complications for years to come.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20356368 PMCID: PMC2861632 DOI: 10.1186/1757-4749-2-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Pathog ISSN: 1757-4749 Impact factor: 4.181
Figure 1. Data are collected from search results on ISI Web of Science (WoS, URL: http://www.isiwebofknowledge.com) with "Helicobacter pylori OR H. pylori" as search string. B. Example infectious agents in literature. The PubMed literature database (URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) was searched for articles whose titles include the words: Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis), Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), Escherichia coli (E. coli), and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Although H. pylori is a recently discovered pathogen, it has more records in literature than well-established pathogens such as S. aureus and M. tuberculosis but is exceeded by HIV and E. coli, the latter being possibly the most cited bacterium and the most commonly used organism in the laboratory.
Prevalence of H. pylori infection in different populations of the world.
| Country | N studied cases | Age range | Pre-valence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 181 | 20-44 | [ | ||
| - rural | 40 (children) | < 20 | - rural | |
| 164 (adults) | 20-90 | [ | ||
| - urban | 363 | > 20 | [ | |
| - poor urban community | 204 | 18-80 | [ | |
| 684 | 2-9 | [ | ||
| - Southern China | 1727 | N/A | [ | |
| - Hong Kong | 397 | 36-65 | [ | |
| - Changle of Fujan | 1456 | [ | ||
| - Alexandria (northern) | 169 mothers | N/A | ||
| 169 children | < 1 | |||
| 1.5 | [ | |||
| - Cairo (central) | 52 | < 6 | ||
| 56 | > 6 | [ | ||
| - Assiut (southern) | urban | N/A | ||
| rural | N/A | [ | ||
| - poor urban area | schoolchildren | N/A | [ | |
| 238 | 3-70 | [ | ||
| 11605 | 20-90 | [ | ||
| 1142 | 4-93 | [ | ||
| 407 | 2 mo-12 yr | [ | ||
| 104 | 0-17 | [ | ||
| 213 | 20-75 | [ | ||
| - St. Petersburg 1995 | 307 | 2-19 | [ | |
| - St. Petersburg 2005 | 370 | 2-19 | [ | |
| 557 | 5-10 | [ | ||
| > 20 | ||||
| 823 | 1-40+ | [ | ||
| 273 | 19-47 | [ | ||
| 3589 | 30-60 | [ | ||
| 260 | 18-61 | [ | ||
| 377 | 30-90 | [ | ||
| 4361 | 19-69 | [ | ||
| 254 (employees) | 11-89 | [ | ||
| 579 workers: | 40-64 | |||
| - Europeans | 190 | |||
| - Maori | 195 | |||
| - Pacific Islanders | 194 | [ | ||
| 332 | > 18 | [ | ||
| - mountain | 1782 | |||
| - coastal | 154 | |||
| 161 | 20-75 | [ | ||
| 176 natives | 10-20 | [ | ||
| 20 immigrants | ||||
| - England | 267 (healthy) | > 18 | [ | |
| 467 (all males) | 18-65 | [ | ||
| - Northern Ireland | 4742 | 12-64 | [ | |
| - South Wales | 1796 | 45-59 | [ | |
| - South Carolina | 938 army recruits | 17-26 | ||
| 324 blacks | ||||
| 47 Hispanics | ||||
| 536 whites | [ | |||
| - California | 556 | 20-39 | [ | |
| - Texas | 246 blacks | 15-80 | ||
| 239 whites | [ | |||
Examples of differences in H. pylori prevalence within and between countries, representing the developing and developed world.
1. The classification into developing or developed countries was retrieved from the United Nation Development Programme's Human Development Reports (URL: http://hdr.undp.org/en)
2. The number reported in the article was 179, which is likely a typographical error.
N/A: Data not available or not applicable
H. pylori reservoirs.
| Hypothesis | Evidence/Example studies | |
|---|---|---|
| - Contaminated food prepared under unhygienic conditions is a probable mechanism for transmission. | A positive correlation was reported between prevalence of infection and consumption of food from street vendors in Peru. | [ |
| - The daily amount of raw vegetables is a risk factor, which possibly implies a role for water too. | In the Colombian Andes, frequent consumption of raw vegetables was associated with likelihood of infection. | [ |
| - Sheep and cow milk can be vehicles for transmission. | See below (under Animals) | [ |
| - Several animal species were suggested as | ||
| - pigtailed monkeys | [ | |
| - rhesus monkeys | [ | |
| - cats | [ | |
| - sheep | [ | |
| - cockroaches | [ | |
| - houseflies (but the housefly hypothesis was challenged) | [ | |
| - Working with animals may increase risk, and animal-to-human transmission is possible. | [ | |
| In Colombian Andes, children who had contact with sheep had higher prevalence odds. | [ | |
| Dore | [ | |
| - | [ | |
| - Experimental animal colonization is possible. | Bacillary forms of | [ |
| - Water contamination is a risk factor for | Many reports, mostly from developing countries, suggested contaminated water sources as risk factors. Examples include studies performed in Peru, Chile, and Kazakhstan. | [ |
| - Water from running, municipal, and underground sources, as well as wastewater has been suggested as reservoir for | - Municipal water | [ |
| - Well water | [ | |
| - Running water | [ | |
| - Wastewater | [ | |
| - | [ | |
| - | - by immunological methods | [ |
| - by PCR | [ | |
| - by hybridization methods | [ | |
| - Viable | - as individual cells | [ |
| - associated with biofilm | [ | |
| - cultured | [ | |
Examples of studies on different environmental sources of H. pylori and their role in H. pylori transmission.
Figure 2Cartograms showing the unequal distribution of (A) wealth, (B) human poverty indices, and (C) total births around the globe. The cartograms, or map projections, were obtained from URL: http://www.worldmapper.org with permission (© Copyright SASI Group, University of Sheffield; and Mark Newman, University of Michigan). They had been generated by a diffusion-based method [91] and were included in the Worldmapper project [92-94].