Publication

Giardia lamblia and Helicobacter pylori coinfection in gastrointestinal biopsies: A retrospective single-center analysis from Switzerland

Journal Paper/Review - Aug 1, 2021

Units
PubMed
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Citation
Schmid M, Brandt S, Bannwart F, Soldini D, Noske A. Giardia lamblia and Helicobacter pylori coinfection in gastrointestinal biopsies: A retrospective single-center analysis from Switzerland. Annals of Diagnostic Pathology 2021; 53
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Annals of Diagnostic Pathology 2021; 53
Publication Date
Aug 1, 2021
Brief description/objective

Background
The protozoan Giardia lamblia (GL) and the bacterium Helicobacter pylori (HP) are common causes of gastrointestinal disease. Coinfection is common and has been reported in studies from Africa, Europe, North America and Asia, but data for Switzerland are scarce.

Aim
To investigate GL and HP prevalence and coinfection rate in gastrointestinal biopsies from the Zurich area of Switzerland.

Methods
Cases were retrieved from the laboratory information system (Medica Institute of Clinical Pathology, Zurich, Switzerland). Histological slides of cases with GL were reviewed, as were the concurrent gastric biopsies, where available.

Results
Between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2020, GL was found in 88 (0.14%) of 62,402 patients with a small intestine biopsy and HP in 10,668 (15.5%) of 68,961 patients with a gastric biopsy. 74/88 (84.1%) of patients with GL had unremarkable small intestine biopsies, 13/88 (14.8%) had increased intraepithelial lymphocytes, 5/88 (5.7%) showed villous atrophy and 2/88 (2.3%) acute inflammation. 71/88 patients (80.7%) with GL had an available gastric biopsy, of which 12/71 (16.9%) were unremarkable, 28/71 (39.4%) had HP-associated gastritis, 11/71 (15.5%) showed reactive gastropathy and 1/71 (1.4%) had autoimmune gastritis.

Conclusion
Coinfection with HP is common in patients with GL in gastrointestinal biopsies from the Zurich area of Switzerland. Therefore, gastroenterologists should consider sampling the stomach when GL is suspected for evaluation of possible concurrent HP-associated gastritis. Likewise, pathologists should scrutinize any small intestine biopsy for the presence of GL when HP-associated gastritis is seen, and vice versa.