Although there have been several reports of hyperplastic gastric polyps associated with persistent Helicobacter pylori gastritis, the association of H. pylori infection with metaplastic polyps in the duodenum has not hitherto been described. After a 52-year-old man had a single episode of hematemesis, endoscopy showed a smooth polyp 1 cm in greatest dimension formed by a proliferation of gastric epithelial cells of fundic and antral type found in the duodenal bulb. The outer surface was entirely covered with a single layer of hyperplastic columnar epithelium with many H. pylori organisms. After administration of metronidazole 500 mg, omeprazole 20 mg for 4 weeks, and clarithromycin 250 mg twice a day for 2 weeks, endoscopy showed a decrease in size of the duodenal polyp. At 12 weeks there was complete regression of the polyp. This report documents a new and unusual finding: resolution of a gastric metaplastic polyp in the duodenum associated with cure of H. pylori.