Abstract
Context
The association between obesity and Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection remains controversial.
Aims
The objective is to investigate the relationship between obesity and H. pylori infection, as diagnosed on the basis of a 14C urea breath test (14C-UBT) and waist circumference (WC).
Settings and design
A retrospective cross-sectional study was performed at Health management center of a Tertiary care teaching hospital in Southwest of China.
Materials and methods
Clinical information of 76,915 individuals (46,003 men and 30,912 women) with 44.0 (35.0–51.0) years was extracted from medical record. H. pylori infection was diagnosed by a positive 14C-UBT, and obesity was defined as WC ≥ 90 cm in men and ≥ 80 cm in women.
Statistical analysis
Descriptive statistics, Student’s t test, Mann-Whitney U test, and chi-square test, followed by binary logistic regression were performed in SPSS.
Results
The overall prevalence of H. pylori infection was 39.95%. The prevalence of H. pylori infection in subjects with central obesity was significantly higher than that in normal-WC subjects (42.20% vs. 39.10%, p < 0.001). WC was significantly higher in H. pylori-positive subjects compared with H. pylori-negative subjects (p < 0.01). There was a linear association between WC quintiles and H. pylori infection prevalence. After adjusting for confounders, central obesity was associated with H. pylori infection (OR = 1.052, 95% CI, 1.009–1.096, p = 0.02).
Conclusions
Central obesity is associated with H. pylori infection after adjusting for multiple confounding factors such as age, gender, and lifestyle characteristics.
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Background
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection affects almost half of the world’s population. H. pylori infection contributes to a variety of gastrointestinal diseases, such as chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer, gastric cancer, and gastric mucosa-associated lymphoma (MALT). Additionally, H. pylori infection also plays a role in extragastric diseases, such as cardiovascular and immunological systemic disorders. Recently, chronic spontaneous urticaria and insulin resistance [1] have also been found to be associated with H. pylori infection. On the other hand, obesity is also a growing global health problem. But the relationship between H. pylori infection and obesity remains controversial [2,3,4,5,6,7]. Some studies identified a positive correlation [3, 8,9,10], while others found a negative correlation [4, 7] or even no correlation [2, 11]. A meta-analysis of 18 observational studies involving over 10,000 subjects found a higher body mass index (BMI) among H. pylori-positive subjects compared with H. pylori-negative subjects [12]. It is known that BMI has significant limitations in the assessment of obesity [6, 13]. Obesity can be assessed by several methods such as BMI and waist circumference (WC). In the majority of prior studies that explored the association between H. pylori infection and obesity, obesity was defined by BMI. For the first time, we used WC to define obesity to evaluate such a relationship. Both BMI and WC are commonly used to estimate body fat. But BMI does not distinguish fat mass from lean mass, nor does it necessarily reflect body fat distribution, particularly in those with BMI < 30 kg/m2 [14]. When used in older people or muscular individuals such as athletes, BMI may lead to an inappropriate diagnosis of obesity, because it generally overestimates adiposity on those with more lean body mass [14]. 14C urea breath test (14C-UBT) was a simple invasive methods with high sensitivity 0.96 (95% CI 0.95–0.97) and specificity 0.93 (95% CI 0.91–0.94) to detect H. pylori infection [15]. In order to explore the association between H. pylori infection diagnosed by 14C-UBT and obesity diagnosed on the basis of WC, we conducted a large-scale cross-sectional retrospective study in West China.
Methods
Data collection
Subjects who underwent 14C-UBT in the Health Management Center of West China Hospital were enrolled into the study from December 2013 to December 2014. The analyses were limited to the participants who had complete records of anthropometric, biochemical data and had results of H. pylori14C-UBT test. A total of 76,915 individuals (46,003 men and 30,912 women) with a medium (interquartile ranges) age of 44.0 (35.0–51.0) years were involved in the final analysis. All subjects had the data about their medical history (hypertension and diabetes mellitus), smoking (current smoking defined as ≥ 20 cigarettes per month for ≥ 6 months) and alcohol use (current alcohol use defined as at least once per week for ≥ 6 months).
The measurement of WC, body weight, blood pressure, height, and hip circumference was recorded and documented. The measurement was performed by trained nurses. The participants were in a standing position with light clothes. WC was measured at the level of the iliac crest. All participants were asked to stand upright with arms hanging freely in normal clothing without shoes. All measurements were measured using the non-elastic tape on bare skin. WC was measured horizontally at the midpoint between the last rib and the iliac crest to the nearest 0.1 cm [16]. The average of three measurements was taken. Hip circumference was measured at the broadest part of the buttock. Height was measured by an inelastic ruler to the nearest 0.5 cm. Weight was measured to the nearest 0.1 kg in light clothing and without shoes using Weight scale (Wujin, RGT-120, Wujin Medical Equipment Co. Ltd., Jiangsu, China). BMI was calculated as weight/height2 (kg/m2). Blood pressure was measured with the sitting position by a sphygmomanometer (Yuyue, GB 3053-93, Yuyue Medical Equipment Co., Ltd., Jiangsu, China) on the right arm after a 5-min rest. The mean of two measurements at least 1 min apart was recorded.
Diagnosis of H. pylori infection
H. pylori infection was diagnosed by a positive 14C-UBT. To avoid false-negative results, subjects were asked not to take any antibiotics for at least 4 weeks or any proton pump inhibitors or H2 antagonists for at least 1–2 weeks before the test. The subjects took a 14C-labeled urea containing tablet (Shanghai Xinke Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China) with 120-mL water after an overnight fast. The dose of radiation was as small as 1 μCi. After 15 min, the subject breathed out into a dry breath card (Anhui Yanghe Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Anhui, China) until the color of the card indicator changed from blue to white, which took about 2–5 min. Thereafter, the card was inserted into the YH04D machine (Anhui Yanghe Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Anhui, China) to detect the presence of H. pylori. Results were labeled as H. pylori positive or negative.
Diagnosis of obesity
Obesity was assessed according to waist circumference. For men, a WC of < 90 cm was defined as normal WC, and a WC ≥ 90 cm as central obesity. For women, a WC < 80 cm was defined as normal WC, and a WC ≥ 80 cm as central obesity [17]. All the subjects were classified into quintiles according to their WC: WC ≤ 73 cm, 73–81 cm, 81–88 cm, and ≥ 88 cm for quintile 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively.
Blood test
Blood samples were collected from the antecubital vein after an overnight fast and were analyzed without freezing. The samples were centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 10 min, and then analyzed. Fasting plasma glucose (FPG), total cholesterol (TC), high-density lipoproteins cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides (TG), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), γ-glutamyltransferase (γ-GGT), serum uric acid (UA), serum creatinine (Scr), and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) were analyzed by a biochemical autoanalyzer (ROCHE cobas 8000, ROCHE Diagnostics, Basel, Switzerland) at the Department of Clinical Laboratory Diagnostics, West China Hospital Sichuan University. Plasma glucose concentrations were assayed by the hexokinase method. TGs in plasma were assayed by means of glycerol oxidation. TC was measured by enzymic method. ALT, AST, and γ-GGT were assayed by means of the enzyme rate method. UA, Scr, and BUN were assayed by means of enzyme coupling method. HDL-C was measured by homogeneous enzyme colorimetry. Low-density lipoproteins cholesterol (LDL-C) was calculated using the Friedewald formula [18], i.e., LDL-C = TC − (HDL-C) − (TG/5).
Statistical analysis
All tests were performed using the IBM SPSS Statistics 19.0 (IBM Corp, New York, NY, USA). Data normality was tested by Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. Continuous variables were presented as mean ± standard deviation for normal distributions, and medians (25th to 75th percentiles) for skewed distributions. Categorical variables were presented as percentage (%). Statistical analysis of continuous variables was performed using the Student’s t test and Mann-Whitney U test, while analysis of categorical variables were performed using the chi-squared test. Binary logistic regression models were used to explore the correlation between central obesity and H. pylori infection after adjustment for a variety of subject’s characteristics. The odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) were calculated. A two-tailed p value of < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Results
Clinical and demographic characteristics
A total of 76,915 subjects (46,003 men [mean age, 45.19 ± 12.52 years] and 30,912 women [mean age, 43.14 ± 12.39 years]) were enrolled into this cross-sectional retrospective study (Table 1) The overall prevalence of H. pylori infection was 39.95%, 39.10% in normal-WC subjects, and 42.20% in subjects with central obesity, respectively (χ2 = 61.613, OR = 1.138, 95% CI, 1.102–1.175).
The characteristics of subjects with normal WC and central obesity are summarized in Table 1. The prevalence of H. pylori infection in subjects with central obesity was significantly higher than that in normal-WC subjects (42.20% vs. 39.10%, p < 0.001). Other parameters including age, height, BMI, WC, hip circumference (HC), systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), pulse pressure(PP), fasting blood glucose (FPG), LDL-C, triglycerides (TG), total cholesterol (TC), uric acid (UA), serum creatinine (Scr), blood urea nitrogen (BUN), aminotransferase (ALT), γ-glutamyltransferase (γ-GGT), aspartate aminotransferase(AST), and prevalence of smoking, alcohol use, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus were significantly higher, but the HDL-C level was significantly lower in subjects with central obesity compared with normal-WC subjects (all p < 0.01).
As shown in Table 2, parameters including age, height, BMI, WC, HC, SBP, DBP, PP, FPG, LDL-C, TG, TC, UA, Scr, BUN, ALT, γ-GGT, AST, and prevalence of smoking, alcohol use, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus were significantly higher, but the HDL-C level was significantly lower in the H. pylori-positive subjects with central obesity compared with H. pylori-positive and normal-WC subjects in both total and male subjects (all p < 0.01), except alcohol use, smoking, and creatinine in female (p > 0.05). H. pylori-positive with central obesity participants were related to a more bad metabolic profile than H. pylori-positive and normal-WC subjects.
The characteristics of H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative subjects are shown in Table 3. Multiple parameters including age, WC, HC, SBP, DBP, FBG, TG, LDL-C, TC, UA, creatinine, and prevalence of central obesity, smoking, alcohol use, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus were significantly higher, but the HDL-C level was significantly lower in H. pylori-positive subjects compared with H. pylori-negative subjects (all p < 0.01). Height, PP, ALT, AST, γ-GGT, and BUN were comparable between H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative subjects. Parameters including age, height, WC, HC, SBP, DBP, FBG, LDL-C, TC, UA, Scr, AST, and prevalence of central obesity, smoking, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus were significantly higher, but the HDL-C level was significantly lower in H. pylori-positive subjects compared with H. pylori-negative subjects (all p < 0.01). Height, PP, ALT, γ-GGT, TG, alcohol use, and BUN were comparable between H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative subjects in male. Characteristics including age, height, WC, HC, FBG, LDL-C, TC, AST, ALT, TG and prevalence of central obesity, smoking, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus were significantly higher in H. pylori-positive subjects compared with H. pylori-negative subjects (all p < 0.01). SBP, DBP, PP, γ-GGT, HDL-C, UA, Scr, hypertension, and BUN were comparable between H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative subjects in female.
A linear association between WC quintiles and H. pylori infection prevalence was detected. The prevalence was 37.76% among the subjects with WC in the first quintile and increased to 39.48%, 40.77%, and 42.05% in quintile 2, 3, and 4, respectively (p for trend < 0.001). These results in Table 4 showed that individuals with a higher WC had an increased H. pylori infection risk.
As shown in Table 5, after adjusting for age, gender, HC, SBP, DBP, FBG, TG, LDL-C, HDL-C, TC, UA, Scr, smoking, alcohol use, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus, central obesity was still found to be positively correlated with H. pylori infection (OR = 1.052, 95% CI, 1.009–1.096, p = 0.02).
As shown in Tables 6 and 7, after adjusting for age, gender, HC, SBP, DBP, FBG, TG, LDL-C, HDL-C, TC, UA, Scr, smoking, alcohol use, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus, age, central obesity, SBP, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, alcohol use were associated with H. pylori infection in female, while age, central obesity, SBP, DBP,TG, HDL cholesterol, and smoking were associated with H. pylori infection in male.
Central obesity was still found to be positively correlated with H. pylori infection in male (OR = 1.049, 95% CI, 1.004–1.096, p = 0.032) and female (OR = 1.075, 95% CI, 1.011–1.143, p = 0.02), respectively.
Discussion
Our study found that the prevalence of H. pylori infection was significantly higher in subjects with central obesity (42.20%) compared with that in normal-WC subjects (39.10%). Similarly, a small-sample study of 103 obese subjects by Arslan et al [19] reported that the prevalence of H. pylori infection was greater in obese subjects (57.2%) versus the control group (27%). An association between central obesity and H. pylori infection was observed in our study, which was also consistent with previous findings. A study involving 2913 Danish adults [20] found that the seroprevalence of H. pylori infection was increased in persons with high BMI. Another study from Iceland [21] also revealed that H. pylori infection was associated with overweight. Moreover, several studies [3, 8,9,10, 22] based on Chinese populations have also drawn a similar conclusion that obesity is linked to H. pylori infection. A study conducted in Central China indicated that the prevalence of H. pylori infection increased with BMI. Yang et al [10] showed that H. pylori infection confirmed by gastric biopsy pathology was associated with obesity assessed by BMI in an elderly Chinese population. Guo et al. [9] reported that waist circumference played an important role in H. pylori infection which was detected by serous H. pylori IgG antibodies; and the vacuolating cytotoxin gene A (VacA) was the most common strain in Northern China. However, some studies found that H. pylori infection had no association with BMI. A case-control study [23] in patients with morbid obesity from Taiwan revealed an opposite connection between morbid obesity and H. pylori seropositivity. A study [24] including 370 severely obese patients showed that the BMI of H. pylori-positive subjects did not differ from that of H. pylori-negative subjects. Ioannou et al. [25] noted that the status of H. pylori/CagA antibody was not related with obesity. A study from Greece [26] revealed that the risk of H. pylori infection was not increased among obese young individuals. Another study [27] consisting of 801 healthy university students showed that there was no significant difference in the BMI between subjects with and without H. pylori infection based on the presence or absence of specific IgG H. pylori antibodies in urine. But our study has shown that the BMI and WC in H. pylori-positive subjects were higher than in H. pylori-negative subjects (p < 0.05) and central obesity is associated with H. pylori infection after adjusting for multiple confounding factors such as age, gender, and lifestyle characteristics. On the one hand, obesity is known to increase the risk of infections [28]. Immune cell dysfunction due to obesity may result in weakened host defense [29]. Many studies in animal models and human subjects have shown that obesity can change both innate and adaptive immunity. Excess adiposity is associated with impaired immune response. Central obesity may be a predisposing factor to H. pylori infection. On the other hand, as virus can lead to infectobesity, H. pylori may be a contributing factor to obesity. The virus induces obesity probably by means of interacting with the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis [30], while the possible mechanisms of H. pylori-induced obesity include interruption of leptin secretion, glucose uptake, and inflammation [31], H. pylori infection can induce chronic low-grade inflammation, and then prolonged, low-level immune stimulation induces hypertrophy of adipose tissue and increases shunting of energy to host defense mechanisms [32]. Our study found that the FPG, TG, LDL-C, and TC levels were higher in H. pylori-positive subjects than those in H. pylori-negative subjects. Thus, we speculate that H. pylori infection contributes to obesity by disrupting glycometabolism and lipid metabolism.
These conflicting findings may be explained by differences in the diagnostic methods of H. pylori infection, sample size, target populations, ethnic groups, geographic regions, and H. pylori strains. Most of these published studies diagnosed H. pylori infection by serology which has a low diagnostic sensitivity (85%) and specificity (79%), only useful to rule out H. pylori infection. The urine H. pylori antibody test [33] only detects exposure status rather than active infection, with a sensitivity of 86% and a specificity of 91%. In our study, H. pylori infection was defined by 14C-UBT, the most reliable noninvasive method that detects active H. pylori infection with a sensitivity of 96% and a specificity of 93%.
In terms of sample size and target population, most prior studies only enrolled hundreds of or no more than ten thousand participants, but in our study, a large population of 76,915 individuals (46,003 men and 30,912 women) with a medium (interquartile ranges) age of 44.0 (35.0–51.0) years were recruited. We focused on the adult population in West China, while some other studies [34] targeted at children and adolescents. It has been shown that race, geographic region and H. pylori strain may be important factors affecting the association between obesity and H. pylori infection. A US study [25] found that the prevalence of H. pylori infection and CagA strains differed among non-Hispanic blacks, whites, and Mexican-Americans.
One of the strengths of our study is that a large population consisting of 76,915 subjects from West China was included in this cross-sectional retrospective survey. All of these participants underwent 14C-UBT and we controlled for multiple covariates to explore the association between obesity and H. pylori infection. Nevertheless, there are also several limitations of our study. Firstly, as this is a cross-sectional retrospective study, the casual relationship between H. pylori infection and central obesity cannot be assessed. Secondly, due to the very small but calculable dose of radiation, 14C-UBT is not appropriate for use in children [35]. Consequently, data on children is not available in the present study, and our findings could not be generalized to the entire population. Thirdly, the H. pylori strain was not determined in this study, and thus the association between different H. pylori strains and obesity cannot be explored.
Conclusion
Our study based on a large Chinese population in West China reveals that central obesity is associated with H. pylori infection after adjusting for multiple confounding factors such as age, gender, and lifestyle characteristics.
Data availability
The data used in this study were collected from the Health Management Center of West China Hospital. These data are not publicly obtainable.
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Acknowledgments
Qinqin Wu thanks the support from the staff members in Health Management Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University for their generous time and support.
Funding
This work was supported by a grant from the Sichuan province health department (Grant No. Chuanganyan2012-111), the Youth Teacher Research Startup Fund of Sichuan University (2016SCU11016), and the Department of Science and Technology of Sichuan Province (Grant No. 2017RZ0046).
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Qinqin Wu designed the study, carried out the study, analyzed the results, and contributed to the discussion of results and drafting of the manuscript. Ken Qin analyzed and interpreted the data in the revised version. Youjuan Wang contributed to designing the study and discussion of results, and the final manuscript. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript.
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This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of West China Hospital of Sichuan University. As this is a retrospective study, informed consent was not essential in line with the Ethical Guidelines for Epidemiological Research.
The study was permitted by the Ethics Committee of West China, Sichuan University.
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Wu, Q., Qin, K. & Wang, Y. Central obesity is associated with helicobacter pylori infection: a large-scale cross-sectional retrospective study in West China. Int J Diabetes Dev Ctries 40, 52–60 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13410-019-00765-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13410-019-00765-8