Je. Thomas et al., Interpreting the C-13-urea breath test among a large population of young children from a developing country, PEDIAT RES, 46(2), 1999, pp. 147-151
The C-13-urea breath test is a noninvasive tool for the diagnosis of gastri
c Helicobacter pylori infection. However, it has not been validated in youn
g children from the developing world, where infection is very common. C-13
urea breath tests were performed on 1532 occasions on 247 Gambian infants a
nd children aged from 3 to 48 mo. The means and variances of the separate s
ub-populations of C-13 enrichment results contained within the overall data
set were estimated by a Genstat procedure using the EM algorithm, thereby i
dentifying a cut-off value to discriminate positive from negative results.
To illustrate the appropriateness of this calculated cut-off value, C-13 ur
ea breath tests were performed upon a small group of 14 patients aged 6 to
28 mo undergoing diagnostic upper endoscopy. Fixed gastric antral biopsies
were examined to identify H. pylori. Two subpopulations were identified wit
hin the large dataset. A cut-off value of 5.47 delta parts per thousand rel
ative to Pee Dee Belemnite Limestone above baseline at 30 min identified 95
% of the normally distributed negative sub-population and 99.4% of the log
normal distributed positive sub-population. Comparison with endoscopic data
confirmed that this cut-off Value was appropriate for this population, as
7/7 children without H. pylori on their gastric biopsies had negative urea
breath tests, and 6/7 children with gastric H. pylori colonization had posi
tive urea breath tests. These findings confirm the value of the urea breath
test as a diagnostic tool in young children from developing countries. The
y also offer a way to calculate the most appropriate cut-off Value for use
in different populations and the Likelihood that it will correctly assign a
ny value into the appropriate sub-population, without the need for endoscop
y.