The endoscopic predictors of Helicobacter pylori status: a meta-analysis of diagnostic performance
Author(s) -
Ben Glover,
Julian Teare,
Hutan Ashrafian,
Nisha Patel
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
therapeutic advances in gastrointestinal endoscopy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2631-7745
DOI - 10.1177/2631774520950840
Subject(s) - meta analysis , helicobacter pylori , cochrane library , medicine , diagnostic odds ratio , odds ratio , gastroenterology , diagnostic accuracy , bivariate analysis , medline , likelihood ratios in diagnostic testing , biology , biochemistry , statistics , mathematics
Objective: The endoscopic findings associated with Helicobacter pylori–naïve status, current infection or past infection are an area of ongoing interest. Previous studies have investigated parameters with a potential diagnostic value. The aim of this study was to perform meta-analysis of the available literature to validate the diagnostic accuracy of mucosal features proposed in the Kyoto classification. Data sources: The databases of MEDLINE and Embase, clinicalTrials.gov and the Cochrane Library were systematically searched for relevant studies from October 1999 to October 2019. Methods: A bivariate random effects model was used to produce pooled diagnostic accuracy calculations for each of the studied endoscopic findings. Diagnostic odds ratios and sensitivity and specificity characteristics were calculated to identify significant predictors of H pylori status. Results: Meta-analysis included 4380 patients in 15 studies. The most significant predictor of an H pylori-naïve status was a regular arrangement of collecting venules (diagnostic odds ratio 55.0, sensitivity 78.3%, specificity 93.8%). Predictors of active H pylori infection were mucosal oedema (18.1, 63.7%, 91.1%) and diffuse redness (14.4, 66.5%, 89.0%). Map-like redness had high specificity for previous H pylori eradication (99.0%), but poor specificity (13.0%). Conclusion: The regular arrangement of collecting venules, mucosal oedema, diffuse redness and map-like redness are important endoscopic findings for determining H pylori status. This meta-analysis provides a tentative basis for developing future endoscopic classification systems.
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