Philip Morris
"Parental Smoking and Infection with Helicobacter Pylori Among Preschool Children in Southern Germany"
Fields
- Author
- Brenner, H.
- Lee, P.N.
- Type
- REPT, REPORT, OTHER
- Document File
- 2505585888/2505586502/D. Lee 1053 -
- Site
- E16
- Author (Organization)
- Epidemiology
- Master ID
- 2505585973/6055
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- Litigation
- Feda/Produced
- Characteristic
- CONF, CONFIDENTIAL
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Area
- BADSTUBER,ANDRE/OFFICE
- Date Loaded
- 11 Sep 2002
- UCSF Legacy ID
- cre19c00
Document Images
2
(ii) The main table presenting the results (Table 3) gives risk for each parent smoking
adjusted for the other parent's smoking, but does not actually show the joint relationship
of HPI infection to smoking by both parents. I would have liked to see an analysis
comparing risk in 4 groups - neither parent smoked, father only smoked, mother only
smoked and both parents smoked.
(iii) No attempt has been made to relate HPI to number of cigarettes smoked by the parents.
(iv) I was also concerned that the criterion used for including a factor in the logistic
regression model - based on a stepwise selection procedure including a covariate only if
it changed the odds ratio estimate for paternal or maternal smoking by at least 10% - may
have led to relevant factors being omitted. I would have thought that if maternal history
ulcer was included (as a marker of HPI status) then so too should paternal history of
ulcer. It would of course have been better had parental HPI status been measured
directly.
While the finding is an interesting one, it clearly needs replication, preferably in a cohort
study that studies onset (not presence) of HPI in children and measures actual HPI status in the
parents.
P N Lee
13.10.99

~ 0 og?_
REVIEW 1074 CONFIDENTIAL
Subject ref 8d
"Parental smoking and infection with Helicobacter pylori
among preschool children in Southern Germany"
H. Brenner et al
Epidemiology (1998), _9, 545-549
Helicobacter pylori infection (HPI) is considered to be an important risk factor for
stomach cancer and for peptic and gastric ulcers and has been under suspicion as a cause of other
diseases, including heart disease. This paper describes the results of a cross-sectional study in
IIIm in Germany involving 945 children aged 5-8 years with no antibiotic treatment in the last
month, in which HPI status was assessed by a urea breath test (noted to be highly sensitive and
specific). Parents completed a questionnaire providing data on smoking habits in the household,
food consumption, demographic and socioeconomic factors, housing and living conditions, and
parental history of ulcer. Information relating to the child on birth order, breastfeeding, day care
attendance and lifetime number of antibiotic treatments was also collected.
The main finding of the study was that after adjustment for smoking by the other parent,
household crowding, birth order and maternal history of ulcer there was a highly significant
positive relationship between HPI and smoking by the father (Odds ratio 3.7, 95% CI 2.3 - b.1).
In contrast there was a significant negative relationship between HPI and smoking by the mother
(Odds ratio 0.4, 95% CI 0.2 - 0.8). The authors note that "these striking patterns cannot be
explained by current knowledge". They suggest the possibility that smoking may hinder mother-
infant transmission of HPI, maternal history of ulcer (which is a strong correlate of material HPI
status) being very strongly related to HPI infection in the child.
I found the statistical analysis rather uninformative for a number of reasons:
(i) Little information was given on the relationship of HPI to the various potential
confounding variables measured.
