In 153 consecutive patients with cirrhosis weassessed: (1) the prevalence of IgG to Helicobacterpylori and compared it with that found in 1010 blooddonors resident in the same area; and (2) therelationships of IgG to Helicobacter pylori with clinical andendoscopic features and with the risk of peptic ulcer.The IgG to Helicobacter pylori prevalence of cirrhoticswas significantly higher than in blood donors (76.5% vs 41.8%; P < 0.0005) and was notassociated with sex, cirrhosis etiology, Child class,gammaglobulins and hypertensive gastropathy. In bothgroups, the prevalence of IgG to Helicobacter pylori was significantly higher in subjects over 40. Amongpatients with cirrhosis a significantly higherprevalence of Helicobacter pylori was found in patientswith previous hospital admission (P = 0.02) and/or upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (P = 0.01) andpatients with peptic ulcer (P = 0.0004). Multivariateanalysis identified increasing age and male sex as riskfactors for a positive Helicobacter pylori serology and no independent risk factors for pepticulcer. The high prevalence of Helicobacterpylori-positive serology found in the present series isrelated to age and sex and might also be explained byprevious hospital admissions and/or uppergastrointestinal endoscopy. Our results do not confirmthe role of Helicobacter pylori as risk factor forpeptic ulcer in patients with liver cirrhosis.