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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Smoking and Helicobacter pylori infection: an individual participant pooled analysis (Stomach Cancer Pooling- StoP Project)

Akihisa HidakaGerson Shigeaki HamadaNuno LunetLizbeth López-carrilloMohammadreza PaksereshtMohammadreza PaksereshtMohammadreza PaksereshtManolis KogevinasMohammad H. DerakhshanMohammad H. DerakhshanNuria AragonésDavid ZaridzeClaudio PelucchiEvita GasenkoWeimin YeMarcis LejaMalaquías López-cervantesSamantha MoraisReza MalekzadehDmitry MaximovitchEva NegriRaúl U. Hernández-ramírezCarlo La VecchiaShoichiro TsuganeAmelie PlymothBárbara PeleteiroZuo-feng ZhangGuo-pei YuAna FerroFarhad PourfarziFarhad Pourfarzi

subject

AdultMaleCancer ResearchEpidemiologyPoolingserologyconsortiumRisk AssessmentsmokingHelicobacter Infections03 medical and health sciencesSex Factors0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsStomach NeoplasmsPrevalenceTobacco SmokingmedicineHumanspooled analysi030212 general & internal medicineStomach cancerAgedSmokersHelicobacter pyloribusiness.industryAge FactorsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCase-control studyCancerindividual participant dataPublication biasOdds ratioMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseConfidence intervalOncologyGastric MucosaCase-Control Studies030220 oncology & carcinogenesisFemalebusinessRisk assessmentDemography

description

Smoking has been associated with acquisition and increased persistence of Helicobacter pylori infection, as well as with lower effectiveness of its eradication. A greater prevalence of infection among smokers could contribute to the increased risk for gastric cancer. We aimed to estimate the association between smoking and seropositivity to H. pylori through an individual participant data pooled analysis using controls from 14 case- control studies participating in the Stomach Cancer Pooling Project. Summary odds ratios and prevalence ratios (PRs), adjusted for age, sex and social class, and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated through random-effects meta-analysis. Heterogeneity was quantified using the I 2 statistic and publication bias with Egger’s test. There was no significant association between smoking (ever vs. never) and H. pylori seropositivity (adjusted odds ratio = 1.08; 95% CI: 0.89 – 1.32; adjusted PR = 1.01; 95% CI: 0.98 – 1.05). The strength of the association did not increase with the intensity or duration of smoking; stratified analyses according to sex, age, region or type of sample did not yield a consistent pattern of variation or statistically significant results, except for participants younger than 55 years and who had been smoking for more than 30 years (adjusted PR = 1.08; 95% CI: 1.02 – 1.15). This is the first collaborative analysis providing pooled estimates for the association between smoking and H. pylori seropositivity, based on detailed and uniform information and adjusting for major covariates. The results do not support an association between smoking and H. pylori infection.

https://doi.org/10.1097/cej.0000000000000471