| Literature DB >> 36013502 |
Ziyan Wang1,2, Yuhua Liu1,2, Yinglong Peng3, Liang Peng1.
Abstract
Nowadays, the relationship between Helicobacter pylori infection (HPI) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) remains controversial.Entities:
Keywords: Helicobacter pylori; functional gastrointestinal disorders; irritable bowel syndrome; meta-analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36013502 PMCID: PMC9413972 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58081035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
Figure 1The detailed search strategy used in PubMed.
Figure 2PRISMA flow of study selection. Previous version of review, the previously published meta-analysis or systematic reviews regarding the similar topic. New studies, the studies not included in previously published meta-analysis or systematic reviews regarding the similar topic.
The characteristics of the studies included in meta-analysis.
| Author | Year | Region | Design of Study | Study | IBS Diagnostic | Mean Age ± SD, Median Age or Age Range (Year) | Sex (Female/Male) | OR | IBS Patients’ Status | Non-IBS Participants’ Status | NOS/AHRQ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agréus et al. [ | 1995 | Sweden | Case-control | Community-based | Diagnostic criteria designed by | Immunological method (serum sample + HM-CAP immunoassay) | Mean age: 48 Age range: 22–80 (all participants of the study) | 96/54 (all participants of the study) | 0.54 | IBS alone | Participants without abdominal or bowel symptoms | 6 |
| Caballero-Plasencia et al. [ | 1999 | Spain | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome I | Immunological method (antibody-IgG for | IBS: 34.1 ± 7.4 Non-IBS: 35.6 ± 5.6 | IBS: 25/25 Non-IBS: 25/25 | 0.85 | 22 IBS alone, 28 IBS + FD | Free of digestive symptoms or systemic disease | 7 |
| Chung et al. [ | 2016 | Taiwan | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome III | RUT (gastric biopsy specimens + RUT) | IBS: 44.84 ± 14.66 Non-IBS: 42.66 ± 11.16 | IBS: 16/12 Non-IBS: 12/7 | 1.78 | IBS alone | Healthy people | 6 |
| Corsetti et al. [ | 2004 | Belgium | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome II | Histology method (gastric biopsy specimens + cresyl violet staining) | IBS: 42 ± 1.2 Non-IBS: 42 ± 1.1 | IBS: 108/36 Non-IBS: 99/66 | 0.74 | IBS + FD | FD patients | 6 |
| Ford et al. [ | 2012 | UK | Cross-sectional * | Community-based | Manning | UBT | IBS: 45.2 ± 2.9 Non-IBS: 45.3 ± 2.9 | IBS: 69/12 Non-IBS:2707/2366 | 1.04 | IBS alone | General population without meeting criteria for dyspepsia or IBS | 7 |
| Locke III et al. [ | 2000 | USA | Cross-sectional | Community-based | Manning | Immunological method (serum sample + ELISA) | Median age IBS: 31 Non-IBS: 39 | IBS: 25/10 Non-IBS: 38/39 | 1.89 | IBS alone | Healthy people | 7 |
| Nam et al. [ | 2013 | Korea | Cross-sectional | Hospital-based | Rome III | RUT (gastric biopsy specimens + RUT) | IBS: 45.3 ± 8.6 Non-IBS: 50.2 ± 9.9 | IBS: 89/169 Non-IBS: 998/1513 | 0.73 | IBS alone, IBS + NERD, IBS + erosive esophagitis | Some participants were NERD patients | 6 |
| Salem et al. [ | 2019 | Egypt | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome III | Immunological method (fresh stool specimens + ELISA) | IBS: 28 ± 9.5 Non-IBS: 33.5 ± 13.9 | NR | 0.78 | IBS alone | Patients with gastrointestinal symptoms but do not fulfill the IBS criteria | 6 |
| Siah et al. [ | 2016 | Singapore | Cross-sectional | Community-based | Rome III | Immunological method (saliva samples + ELISA) | Over 21 years old | IBS: 40/22 Non-IBS:139/96 | 0.78 | IBS alone | General population without reporting clear health status | 6 |
| Sýkora et al. [ | 2016 | Czech Republic | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome III | Comprehensive method (stool antigen test, | Median age IBS: NR Non-IBS: 13 | IBS: NR Non-IBS: 32/25 | 1.06 | Children patients | Children without any signs of gastrointestinal conditions | 6 |
| Yakoob et al. [ | 2012 | Pakistan | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome III | Histology method (gastric biopsy specimens + histopathology test) | IBS: 40 ± 15 Non-IBS: 42 ± 14 | IBS: 54/116 Non-IBS: 54/106 | 1.76 | IBS alone | Chronic diarrhea | 6 |
| Yang et al. [ | 2017 | China | Case-control | Hospital-based | Rome III | Comprehensive method (gastric biopsy specimens + RUT and 14C-UBT) | IBS: 40.53 ± 13.27 Non-IBS: 41.96 ± 12.89 | IBS: 158/177 Non-IBS: 183/152 | 1.62 | IBS alone | Healthy people | 6 |
| Zhao et al. [ | 2010 | China | Cross-sectional | Community-based | Rome II | Immunological method (blood sample + ELISA) | All participants: 42.5 ± 15.2 | All participants: 8393/7685 | 0.93 | IBS alone, IBS + other digestive disease | Participants with poor health or other digestive diseases | 7 |
RUT, rapid urease test; UBT, urease breath test; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; HM-CAP immunoassay, high molecular weight cell-associated protein immunoassay; NOS, Newcastle-Ottawa Scale; AHRQ, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; BDQ, bowel disease questionnaire; NHIRD, National Health Insurance Research Database; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; FD, functional dyspepsia; Hp, Helicobacter pylori; NERD, non-erosive reflux disease; FGDs, functional gastroduodenal disorders; NR, not reported; * an cross-sectional investigation of a cohort study.
Figure 3Forest plot of the overall association between HPI and IBS. M-H, Mantel–Haenszel; HPI, Helicobacter pylori infection; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome [14,16,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37].
Subgroup analysis of the association between HPI and IBS.
| No. of Studies | No. of | The Association between HPI and IBS | Heterogeneity | Subgroup | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pooled OR | Confidence Interval | I ² | ||||||
|
| 0.45 | |||||||
| Asia | 6 | 7261 | 1.14 | [0.78, 1.66] | 0.5 | 77% | 0.0007 | |
| Europe | 5 | 5720 | 0.84 | [0.60, 1.17] | 0.3 | 0% | 0.75 | |
| Other regions | 2 | 192 | 1.18 | [0.49, 2.80] | 0.71 | 29% | 0.23 | |
|
| 0.52 | |||||||
| Community-based | 5 | 8807 | 0.93 | [0.72, 1.21] | 0.6 | 0% | 0.46 | |
| Hospital-based | 8 | 4366 | 1.09 | [0.74, 1.58] | 0.67 | 68% | 0.002 | |
|
| 0.28 | |||||||
| Rome | 10 | 7811 | 1.04 | [0.78, 1.39] | 0.8 | 61% | 0.006 | |
| Manning | 2 | 5266 | 1.16 | [0.73, 1.82] | 0.53 | 0% | 0.33 | |
| Other criteria | 1 | 96 | 0.54 | [0.24, 1.24] | 0.15 | - | - | |
|
| 0.05 | |||||||
| Immunological method | 6 | 3833 | 0.88 | [0.67, 1.16] | 0.37 | 0% | 0.63 | |
| Histological method | 2 | 639 | 1.19 | [0.51, 2.78] | 0.68 | 75% | 0.04 | |
| RUT | 2 | 2816 | 0.83 | [0.46, 1.51] | 0.54 | 23% | 0.25 | |
| Comprehensive method | 2 | 731 | 1.61 | [1.19, 2.18] | 0.002 | 0% | 0.79 | |
| UBT | 1 | 5154 | 1.04 | [0.63, 1.72] | 0.88 | - | - | |
|
| 0.18 | |||||||
| Cross-sectional study | 5 | 11,480 | 0.85 | [0.70, 1.04] | 0.12 | 6% | 0.37 | |
| Case-control study | 8 | 1693 | 1.13 | [0.80, 1.60] | 0.5 | 45% | 0.08 | |
Hp, Helicobacter pylori; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; RUT, rapid urease test; UBT, urease breath test.
Figure 4Forest plot of the adjusted association between HPI and IBS after the studies with defined confounding factors were excluded. M-H, Mantel–Haenszel; HPI, Helicobacter pylori infection; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome [16,27,28,32,33,35].
Figure 5Forest plots of the associations between HPI and different subtypes of IBS. Forest plot of the association between HPI and IBS-D (a). Forest plot of the association between HPI and IBS-C (b). Forest plot of the association between HPI and IBS-M (c). M-H, Mantel–Haenszel; HPI, Helicobacter pylori infection; IBS-D, irritable bowel syndrome of diarrhea type; IBS-C, irritable bowel syndrome of constipation type; IBS-M, irritable bowel syndrome of mixed type [14,16,28,34].
Figure 6Forest plot of the association between Cag A-positive HPI and IBS. M-H, Mantel–Haenszel; HPI, Helicobacter pylori infection; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; Cag A, cytotoxin-associated gene A [14,32].
Figure 7Funnel plot of publication bias assessment (a) and figure of sensitivity analysis (b) regarding overall association between HPI and IBS [14,16,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37].