Appropriate strategies for testing and treating Helicobacter pylori in children: when and how?
Helicobacter pylori infection is acquired primarily during childhood and carries a significant lifetime risk for morbidity. In developing countries, approximately 70% of children are infected with the bacterium by their 15th birthday. In the United States, the rate of H pylori infection among children varies widely–approximately 10% of all 10-year-olds are infected; however, this figure is substantially higher among populations of immigrant children and children born of recent immigrants to the United States. H pylori transmission is primarily “person-to-person” via fecal-oral, gastric-oral, or oral-oral routes, with evidence suggesting contaminated water as a potential source of infection. Risk factors for infection in childhood include an infected family member, having > or =2 siblings, crowded living conditions, lower socioeconomic means, and attendance at a daycare facility. The natural history of H pylori infection includes an increased lifetime risk for peptic ulcer and gastric