The Helicobacter infection was caused many diseases, and found in the liver tissue of primary liver cancer patients. Liver cancer was seriously dangerous of healthy, it confirmed that the correlation between liver cancer and multiple viruses, such as HBV and HCV, even include helicobacter. In this study, we explored the association between helicobacter and primary liver carcinoma. by searching relevant literature with database. The separated case-control studies on relationship between helicobacter infection and primary liver carcinoma were analyzed by Meta-analysis with Revman 5.0. 9 studies were included in the final analysis. Overall the prevalence of helicobacter infection was 52.53% (166 of 316) in case group vs 9.96% (23 of 231) in control group, and the summary odds ratio for the association of helicobacter infection with the risk for primary liver carcinoma (using the fixed-effects model, which accounted for the homogeneity across the 9 studies) was determined to be odds ratio 14.19 (95% CI, 7.92~15.14). Sensitivity analysis showed the results were no publication bias.the funnel plot was approximately standard symmetric, Failure safety number (Nfs) analysis: Calculate Nfs at P=0.05 level, Nfs 0.05=( Σ Z/1.64) 2-K=369.395, the large Nfs value also indicateed that there was no publication bias in the study. So the Meta-analysis demonstrated there was a positive association between helicobacter infection and the risk of primary liver carcinoma.
Published in | Cancer Research Journal (Volume 12, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11 |
Page(s) | 1-4 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Helicobacter, Primary Liver Cancer, Meta Analysis
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APA Style
Xiaolong, L., Changhe, C. (2024). Meta-Analysis on Relation Between Helicobacter Infection and Primary Liver Carcinoma. Cancer Research Journal, 12(1), 1-4. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11
ACS Style
Xiaolong, L.; Changhe, C. Meta-Analysis on Relation Between Helicobacter Infection and Primary Liver Carcinoma. Cancer Res. J. 2024, 12(1), 1-4. doi: 10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11
AMA Style
Xiaolong L, Changhe C. Meta-Analysis on Relation Between Helicobacter Infection and Primary Liver Carcinoma. Cancer Res J. 2024;12(1):1-4. doi: 10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11
@article{10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11, author = {Liu Xiaolong and Cheng Changhe}, title = {Meta-Analysis on Relation Between Helicobacter Infection and Primary Liver Carcinoma}, journal = {Cancer Research Journal}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1-4}, doi = {10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.crj.20241201.11}, abstract = {The Helicobacter infection was caused many diseases, and found in the liver tissue of primary liver cancer patients. Liver cancer was seriously dangerous of healthy, it confirmed that the correlation between liver cancer and multiple viruses, such as HBV and HCV, even include helicobacter. In this study, we explored the association between helicobacter and primary liver carcinoma. by searching relevant literature with database. The separated case-control studies on relationship between helicobacter infection and primary liver carcinoma were analyzed by Meta-analysis with Revman 5.0. 9 studies were included in the final analysis. Overall the prevalence of helicobacter infection was 52.53% (166 of 316) in case group vs 9.96% (23 of 231) in control group, and the summary odds ratio for the association of helicobacter infection with the risk for primary liver carcinoma (using the fixed-effects model, which accounted for the homogeneity across the 9 studies) was determined to be odds ratio 14.19 (95% CI, 7.92~15.14). Sensitivity analysis showed the results were no publication bias.the funnel plot was approximately standard symmetric, Failure safety number (Nfs) analysis: Calculate Nfs at P=0.05 level, Nfs 0.05=( Σ Z/1.64) 2-K=369.395, the large Nfs value also indicateed that there was no publication bias in the study. So the Meta-analysis demonstrated there was a positive association between helicobacter infection and the risk of primary liver carcinoma. }, year = {2024} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Meta-Analysis on Relation Between Helicobacter Infection and Primary Liver Carcinoma AU - Liu Xiaolong AU - Cheng Changhe Y1 - 2024/01/11 PY - 2024 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11 DO - 10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11 T2 - Cancer Research Journal JF - Cancer Research Journal JO - Cancer Research Journal SP - 1 EP - 4 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8214 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20241201.11 AB - The Helicobacter infection was caused many diseases, and found in the liver tissue of primary liver cancer patients. Liver cancer was seriously dangerous of healthy, it confirmed that the correlation between liver cancer and multiple viruses, such as HBV and HCV, even include helicobacter. In this study, we explored the association between helicobacter and primary liver carcinoma. by searching relevant literature with database. The separated case-control studies on relationship between helicobacter infection and primary liver carcinoma were analyzed by Meta-analysis with Revman 5.0. 9 studies were included in the final analysis. Overall the prevalence of helicobacter infection was 52.53% (166 of 316) in case group vs 9.96% (23 of 231) in control group, and the summary odds ratio for the association of helicobacter infection with the risk for primary liver carcinoma (using the fixed-effects model, which accounted for the homogeneity across the 9 studies) was determined to be odds ratio 14.19 (95% CI, 7.92~15.14). Sensitivity analysis showed the results were no publication bias.the funnel plot was approximately standard symmetric, Failure safety number (Nfs) analysis: Calculate Nfs at P=0.05 level, Nfs 0.05=( Σ Z/1.64) 2-K=369.395, the large Nfs value also indicateed that there was no publication bias in the study. So the Meta-analysis demonstrated there was a positive association between helicobacter infection and the risk of primary liver carcinoma. VL - 12 IS - 1 ER -