AI Article Synopsis

  • H. pylori is transmitted primarily through gastro- or fecal-oral routes, while HIV transmission occurs via sexual contact, body fluids, and from mother to child, indicating distinct risk factors for each infection.
  • Several studies have shown a lower prevalence of H. pylori in HIV-infected individuals, contradicting the expectation of similar rates in both groups, with some even reporting higher rates in HIV-positive subjects.
  • Evidence suggests that a functional immune system is necessary for H. pylori to colonize the stomach effectively, with an inverse relationship found between H. pylori infection rates and the level of immunosuppression (CD4 counts) in HIV patients.

Article Abstract

Background: The risk factors for acquiring Helicobacter pylori and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infections are different: H. pylori is transmitted by gastro- or fecal-oral routes and is associated with low socioeconomic conditions, while HIV is transmitted through sexual intercourse, infected body fluids, and transplacentally. If the host responses to these infections were independent, the prevalence of H. pylori should be similar in HIV-infected and non-infected patients. Yet, several studies have detected a lower prevalence of H. pylori in patients with HIV infection, whereas other studies found either no differences or greater rates of H. pylori infection in HIV-positive subjects.

Objective: To review studies that addressed the issue of these two simultaneous infections and attempt to determine whether reliable conclusions can be drawn from this corpus of often contrasting evidence.

Methods: Electronic literature search for relevant publications, followed by manual search of additional citations from extracted articles.

Results: The initial search yielded 44 publications; after excluding case reports, reviews, narrowly focused articles, and duplicate reports, there remained 29 articles, which are the corpus of this review. With one exception, all studies reported higher rates of H. pylori infection in HIV-negative subjects. Five studies also examined the CD4 lymphocyte counts and found an inverse correlation between the degree of immunosuppression and the prevalence of active H. pylori infection.

Conclusions: Current evidence suggests that it is likely that H. pylori needs a functional immune system to successfully and persistently colonize the human gastric mucosa.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hel.12131DOI Listing

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