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Eradication of Helicobacter pylori prevents cancer development in subjects with mild gastric atrophy identified by serum pepsinogen levels

✍ Scribed by Kimihiko Yanaoka; Masashi Oka; Hiroshi Ohata; Noriko Yoshimura; Hisanobu Deguchi; Chizu Mukoubayashi; Shotaro Enomoto; Izumi Inoue; Mikitaka Iguchi; Takao Maekita; Kazuki Ueda; Hirotoshi Utsunomiya; Hideyuki Tamai; Mitsuhiro Fujishiro; Masataka Iwane; Tatsuya Takeshita; Osamu Mohara; Masao Ichinose


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
French
Weight
177 KB
Volume
125
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

A longitudinal cohort study was conducted in __Helicobactor pylori‐__infected middle‐aged Japanese males to evaluate the preventive effects of H. pylori eradication on the development of gastric cancer according to the extent of chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG). The extent of CAG was monitored by baseline serum pepsinogen (PG) levels. We followed 3,656 subjects with persistent H. pylori infection and 473 subjects with successful H. pylori eradication for cancer development for a mean (SD) of 9.3 (0.7) years. Groups with and without extensive CAG were categorized based on PG test‐positive criteria to detect extensive CAG of PG I ≤ 70 ng/ml and PG I/II ratio ≤ 3.0. During the study period, 5 and 55 gastric cancers developed in H. pylori‐eradicated and the noneradicated subjects, respectively, indicating no significant reduction in cancer incidence after H. pylori eradication. Among the noneradicated subjects, 1,329 were PG test‐positive and 2,327 were PG test‐negative. Gastric cancer was confirmed in 30 and 25 subjects, respectively. Among subjects whose infection was eradicated, 155 were PG test‐positive and 318 were PG test‐negative. Of these subjects, gastric cancer was confirmed in 3 and 2 subjects, respectively. Significant reduction in cancer incidence after eradication was observed only in PG test‐negative subjects (p < 0.05; log‐rank test). The results of this study strongly indicate that cancer development after eradication depends on the presence of extensive CAG before eradication and that H. pylori eradication is beneficial to most PG test‐negative subjects with mild CAG as defined by the aforementioned criteria. © 2009 UICC


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Risk of gastric cancer in asymptomatic,
✍ Kimihiko Yanaoka; Masashi Oka; Noriko Yoshimura; Chizu Mukoubayashi; Shotaro Eno 📂 Article 📅 2008 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 French ⚖ 224 KB

## Abstract A total of 5,209 asymptomatic, middle‐aged subjects, whose serum pepsinogen (PG) and __Helicobacter pylori__ antibody levels had been assessed, were followed for 10 years. Subjects with positive serum __H. pylori__ antibodies (>50 U/mL) had an increased cancer risk (HR = 3.48, 95% CI =