Best Lawrence Mj, Takwoingi Yemisi, Siddique Sulman, Selladurai Abiram, Gandhi Akash, Low Benjamin, Yaghoobi Mohammad, Gurusamy Kurinchi Selvan
Department of Surgery, Royal Free Campus, UCL Medical School, Rowland Hill Street, London, UK, NW32PF.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Mar 15;3(3):CD012080. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012080.pub2.
Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) infection has been implicated in a number of malignancies and non-malignant conditions including peptic ulcers, non-ulcer dyspepsia, recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding, unexplained iron deficiency anaemia, idiopathic thrombocytopaenia purpura, and colorectal adenomas. The confirmatory diagnosis of H pylori is by endoscopic biopsy, followed by histopathological examination using haemotoxylin and eosin (H & E) stain or special stains such as Giemsa stain and Warthin-Starry stain. Special stains are more accurate than H & E stain. There is significant uncertainty about the diagnostic accuracy of non-invasive tests for diagnosis of H pylori.
To compare the diagnostic accuracy of urea breath test, serology, and stool antigen test, used alone or in combination, for diagnosis of H pylori infection in symptomatic and asymptomatic people, so that eradication therapy for H pylori can be started.
We searched MEDLINE, Embase, the Science Citation Index and the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment Database on 4 March 2016. We screened references in the included studies to identify additional studies. We also conducted citation searches of relevant studies, most recently on 4 December 2016. We did not restrict studies by language or publication status, or whether data were collected prospectively or retrospectively.
We included diagnostic accuracy studies that evaluated at least one of the index tests (urea breath test using isotopes such as C or C, serology and stool antigen test) against the reference standard (histopathological examination using H & E stain, special stains or immunohistochemical stain) in people suspected of having H pylori infection.
Two review authors independently screened the references to identify relevant studies and independently extracted data. We assessed the methodological quality of studies using the QUADAS-2 tool. We performed meta-analysis by using the hierarchical summary receiver operating characteristic (HSROC) model to estimate and compare SROC curves. Where appropriate, we used bivariate or univariate logistic regression models to estimate summary sensitivities and specificities.
We included 101 studies involving 11,003 participants, of which 5839 participants (53.1%) had H pylori infection. The prevalence of H pylori infection in the studies ranged from 15.2% to 94.7%, with a median prevalence of 53.7% (interquartile range 42.0% to 66.5%). Most of the studies (57%) included participants with dyspepsia and 53 studies excluded participants who recently had proton pump inhibitors or antibiotics.There was at least an unclear risk of bias or unclear applicability concern for each study.Of the 101 studies, 15 compared the accuracy of two index tests and two studies compared the accuracy of three index tests. Thirty-four studies (4242 participants) evaluated serology; 29 studies (2988 participants) evaluated stool antigen test; 34 studies (3139 participants) evaluated urea breath test-C; 21 studies (1810 participants) evaluated urea breath test-C; and two studies (127 participants) evaluated urea breath test but did not report the isotope used. The thresholds used to define test positivity and the staining techniques used for histopathological examination (reference standard) varied between studies. Due to sparse data for each threshold reported, it was not possible to identify the best threshold for each test.Using data from 99 studies in an indirect test comparison, there was statistical evidence of a difference in diagnostic accuracy between urea breath test-C, urea breath test-C, serology and stool antigen test (P = 0.024). The diagnostic odds ratios for urea breath test-C, urea breath test-C, serology, and stool antigen test were 153 (95% confidence interval (CI) 73.7 to 316), 105 (95% CI 74.0 to 150), 47.4 (95% CI 25.5 to 88.1) and 45.1 (95% CI 24.2 to 84.1). The sensitivity (95% CI) estimated at a fixed specificity of 0.90 (median from studies across the four tests), was 0.94 (95% CI 0.89 to 0.97) for urea breath test-C, 0.92 (95% CI 0.89 to 0.94) for urea breath test-C, 0.84 (95% CI 0.74 to 0.91) for serology, and 0.83 (95% CI 0.73 to 0.90) for stool antigen test. This implies that on average, given a specificity of 0.90 and prevalence of 53.7% (median specificity and prevalence in the studies), out of 1000 people tested for H pylori infection, there will be 46 false positives (people without H pylori infection who will be diagnosed as having H pylori infection). In this hypothetical cohort, urea breath test-C, urea breath test-C, serology, and stool antigen test will give 30 (95% CI 15 to 58), 42 (95% CI 30 to 58), 86 (95% CI 50 to 140), and 89 (95% CI 52 to 146) false negatives respectively (people with H pylori infection for whom the diagnosis of H pylori will be missed).Direct comparisons were based on few head-to-head studies. The ratios of diagnostic odds ratios (DORs) were 0.68 (95% CI 0.12 to 3.70; P = 0.56) for urea breath test-C versus serology (seven studies), and 0.88 (95% CI 0.14 to 5.56; P = 0.84) for urea breath test-C versus stool antigen test (seven studies). The 95% CIs of these estimates overlap with those of the ratios of DORs from the indirect comparison. Data were limited or unavailable for meta-analysis of other direct comparisons.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: In people without a history of gastrectomy and those who have not recently had antibiotics or proton ,pump inhibitors, urea breath tests had high diagnostic accuracy while serology and stool antigen tests were less accurate for diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori infection.This is based on an indirect test comparison (with potential for bias due to confounding), as evidence from direct comparisons was limited or unavailable. The thresholds used for these tests were highly variable and we were unable to identify specific thresholds that might be useful in clinical practice.We need further comparative studies of high methodological quality to obtain more reliable evidence of relative accuracy between the tests. Such studies should be conducted prospectively in a representative spectrum of participants and clearly reported to ensure low risk of bias. Most importantly, studies should prespecify and clearly report thresholds used, and should avoid inappropriate exclusions.
幽门螺杆菌(H pylori)感染与多种恶性肿瘤及非恶性疾病有关,包括消化性溃疡、非溃疡性消化不良、复发性消化性溃疡出血、不明原因的缺铁性贫血、特发性血小板减少性紫癜和结肠腺瘤。幽门螺杆菌的确诊诊断需通过内镜活检,随后进行苏木精和伊红(H&E)染色或特殊染色(如吉姆萨染色和沃辛-斯塔里染色)的组织病理学检查。特殊染色比H&E染色更准确。对于幽门螺杆菌诊断的非侵入性检测的诊断准确性存在很大不确定性。
比较单独或联合使用尿素呼气试验、血清学检测和粪便抗原检测对有症状和无症状人群幽门螺杆菌感染的诊断准确性,以便开始幽门螺杆菌根除治疗。
我们于2016年3月4日检索了MEDLINE、Embase、科学引文索引和英国国家卫生研究院卫生技术评估数据库。我们筛选了纳入研究中的参考文献以识别其他研究。我们还对相关研究进行了引文检索,最近一次检索是在2016年12月4日。我们未对研究进行语言、发表状态或数据收集是前瞻性还是回顾性的限制。
我们纳入了诊断准确性研究,这些研究针对疑似幽门螺杆菌感染的人群,评估了至少一项指标检测(使用碳-13或碳-14等同位素的尿素呼气试验、血清学检测和粪便抗原检测)相对于参考标准(使用H&E染色、特殊染色或免疫组织化学染色的组织病理学检查)的准确性。
两位综述作者独立筛选参考文献以识别相关研究,并独立提取数据。我们使用QUADAS-2工具评估研究的方法学质量。我们使用分层汇总接受者操作特征(HSROC)模型进行荟萃分析,以估计和比较SROC曲线。在适当情况下,我们使用双变量或单变量逻辑回归模型来估计汇总敏感性和特异性。
我们纳入了101项研究,涉及11003名参与者,其中5839名参与者(53.1%)有幽门螺杆菌感染。研究中幽门螺杆菌感染的患病率在15.2%至94.7%之间,中位数患病率为53.7%(四分位间距为42.0%至66.5%)。大多数研究(57%)纳入了消化不良的参与者,53项研究排除了近期使用过质子泵抑制剂或抗生素的参与者。每项研究至少存在偏倚风险不明确或适用性问题不明确的情况。在101项研究中,15项比较了两项指标检测的准确性,两项研究比较了三项指标检测的准确性。34项研究(4242名参与者)评估了血清学检测;29项研究(2988名参与者)评估了粪便抗原检测;34项研究(3139名参与者)评估了碳-13尿素呼气试验;21项研究(1810名参与者)评估了碳-14尿素呼气试验;两项研究(127名参与者)评估了尿素呼气试验,但未报告所使用的同位素。不同研究之间用于定义检测阳性的阈值以及用于组织病理学检查(参考标准)的染色技术各不相同。由于每项报告阈值的数据稀少,无法确定每项检测的最佳阈值。在一项间接检测比较中,使用99项研究的数据,有统计学证据表明碳-13尿素呼气试验、碳-14尿素呼气试验、血清学检测和粪便抗原检测在诊断准确性上存在差异(P = 0.024)。碳-13尿素呼气试验、碳-14尿素呼气试验、血清学检测和粪便抗原检测的诊断比值比分别为153(置信区间95%CI为73.7至316)、105(95%CI为74.0至150)、47.4(95%CI为25.5至88.1)和45.1(95%CI为24.2至84.1)。在固定特异性为0.90(四项检测研究的中位数)时估计的敏感性(95%CI),碳-13尿素呼气试验为0.94(95%CI为0.89至