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1.
Background. Relatives of gastric cancer patients have an increased risk of gastric cancer, possibly related to genetically‐related strains of Helicobacter pylori or a common environment. Methods. The pattern of gastritis and H. pylori from gastric cancer patients and their first‐degree relatives were compared using detailed DNA fingerprints and vacA, cagA, and iceA genotyping. Results. Sixteen index cases from Korea, the US, or Colombia and their 38 first‐degree relatives (brothers, sisters, sons and daughters) were studied. No definite, or consistent, relationship between the pattern of gastritis and the relatedness of the H. pylori strain was observed (i.e. relatives could have an identical or a totally different pattern of gastritis regardless if they were infected with identical or highly similar organisms). For example, three elderly siblings of an index case with atrophic pangastritis had identical H. pylori isolates and environments in childhood and yet two had antral predominant nonatrophic gastritis, which is typically associated with duodenal ulcer instead of gastric cancer. Conclusions. The results of this study are not consistent with the hypothesis that specific virulence factors or similar H. pylori strains correlate with a specific histologic pattern or outcome even among those sharing the same environment in childhood.  相似文献   

2.
Background. Helicobacter pylori is the main cause of gastritis and a primary carcinogen. The aim of this study was to assess oxidative damage in mucosal compartments of gastric mucosa in H. pylori positive and negative atrophic and nonatrophic gastritis. Materials and methods. Five groups of 10 patients each were identified according to H. pylori positive or negative chronic atrophic (Hp‐CAG and CAG, respectively) and nonatrophic gastritis (Hp‐CG and CG, respectively), and H. pylori negative normal mucosa (controls). Oxidative damage was evaluated by nitrotyrosine immunohistochemistry in the whole mucosa and in each compartment at baseline and at 2 and 12 months after eradication. Types of intestinal metaplasia were classified by histochemistry. Results. Total nitrotyrosine levels appeared significantly higher in H. pylori positive than in negative patients, and in Hp‐CAG than in Hp‐CG (p < .001); no differences were found between H. pylori negative gastritis and normal mucosa. Nitrotyrosine were found in foveolae and intestinal metaplasia only in Hp‐CAG. At 12 months after H. pylori eradication, total nitrotyrosine levels showed a trend toward a decrease in Hp‐CG and decreased significantly in Hp‐CAG (p = .002), disappearing from the foveolae (p = .002), but remaining unchanged in intestinal metaplasia. Type I and II of intestinal metaplasia were present with the same prevalence in Hp‐CAG and CAG, and did not change after H. pylori eradication. Conclusions. Oxidative damage of the gastric mucosa increases from Hp‐CG to Hp‐CAG, involving the foveolae and intestinal metaplasia. H. pylori eradication induces a complete healing of foveolae but not of intestinal metaplasia, reducing the overall oxidative damage in the mucosa.  相似文献   

3.

Background

Infections with gastric Helicobacter spp. are associated with gastritis, peptic ulceration, and malignancies. Helicobacter pylori is the most prevalent Helicobacter species colonizing the human stomach. Other gastric non‐H. pylori helicobacters (NHPHs) have been described in 0.2%‐6% of human patients with gastric disorders. Nevertheless, due to difficulties in the diagnosis of NHPH infections and lack of routine screening, this is most likely an underestimation of their true prevalence. To the best of our knowledge, no studies have been performed in the presence of Helicobacter spp. in children suffering from gastric disorders in Southern Turkey.

Materials and methods

In total, 110 children with gastric complaints were examined at the Cukurova University Balcali hospital, Turkey. Gastroscopy was performed to evaluate the presence of gastric mucosal lesions. Biopsies of the pyloric gland zone were taken for histopathological analysis, rapid urease testing, and presence of Helicobacter spp. DNA by PCR.

Results

Based on the PCR results, the prevalence of Helicobacter spp. was 32.7% (36/110). H. pylori was found in 30.9% (34/110), H. suis in 1.8% (2/110), and H. heilmannii/H. ailurogastricus in 0.9% (1/110) of the human patients. A mixed infection with H. pylori and H. suis was present in one patient. The presence of mucosal abnormalities, such as nodular inflammation, ulceration, and hyperemia, as well as gastritis, was significantly higher in Helicobacter spp. positive patients.

Conclusion

Helicobacter pylori, H. suis, and H. heilmannii/H. ailurogastricus were present in children with gastric complaints. Infection with these pathogens may be involved in the development of gastritis and ulceration.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Helicobacter pylori has undergone considerable adaptation to allow chronic persistence within the gastric environment. While H. pylori‐associated diseases are driven by an excessive inflammation, severe gastritis is detrimental to colonization by this pathogen. Hence, H. pylori has developed strategies to minimize the severity of gastritis it triggers in its host. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) is well known for its role in protecting against oxidative attack; less recognized is its ability to inhibit immunity, shown for SOD from mammalian sources and those of some bacterial species. This study examined whether H. pylori SOD (HpSOD) has the ability to inhibit the host immune response to these bacteria.

Materials and Methods

The ability of recombinant HpSOD to modify the response to LPS was measured using mouse macrophages. A monoclonal antibody against HpSOD was generated and injected into H. pylori‐infected mice.

Results

Addition of HpSOD to cultures of mouse macrophages significantly inhibited the pro‐inflammatory cytokine response to LPS stimulation. A monoclonal antibody was generated that was specific for SOD from H. pylori. When injected into mice infected with H. pylori for 3 months, this antibody was readily detected in both sera and gastric tissues 5 days later. While treatment with anti‐HpSOD had no effect on H. pylori colonization at this time point, it significantly increased the levels of a range of pro‐inflammatory cytokines in the gastric tissues. This did not occur with antibodies against other antioxidant enzymes.

Conclusions

SOD from H. pylori can inhibit the production of pro‐inflammatory cytokine during in vivo infection.  相似文献   

5.
Background. Helicobacter pylori gastritis induces reversible lowering of Ascorbic Acid (AA) intragastric concentrations. No studies have been aimed at determining the gastric juice AA concentration of atrophic body gastritis (ABG) patients. Uric Acid (UA), is another potent hydro‐soluble scavenger of ROS and its possible modification in the gastric juice of patients with H. pylori gastritis have never been investigated. This study was aimed at investigating the levels of AA and UA in the plasma and gastric juice of ABG patients, compared with H. pylori positive patients without corporal atrophy, and with healthy individuals. Materials and Methods. Thirteen ABG patients (Group 1): 32 Chronic non‐atrophic H. pylori gastritis patients (Group 2); and 13 healthy stomach controls (Group 3) attending gastroscopy with gastric biopsies (antrum = 3, corpus = 3) had plasma and intragastric levels of AA and UA measured. Results. Intragastric AA concentration was significantly lower in group 1 (median 0.21 µg/ml, range 0.1–24) compared both with groups 2 (median 5.5 µg/ml, range 0.1–33.2) (p = 0.043) and 3 (median 14.9 µg/ml, range 0.34–44.8) (p = 0.0028). Intragastric UA was not different between the three groups. Intragastric AA concentration resulted negatively correlated with the intragastric pH (Spearman r = ?0.47, p = 0.0003). In patients with gastritis (groups 1 and 2) there was a significant negative correlation between the sum of the Sydney Score variables in the body mucosa, and AA in the gastric juice (Spearman r = ?0.55; p = 0.0001). Conclusion. The study shows that intragastric pH is the key factor for the depletion of gastric juice AA observed in patients with corporal atrophy and to a lower extent with nonatrophic H. pylori gastritis.  相似文献   

6.
Gastric cancer (GC) ranks among the most lethal epithelial malignancies, and its striking mortality rate prompts a global prevention strategy. Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) gastritis is the main GC promoter, and the 2014 Global Kyoto conference recognized H. pylori gastritis as a (treatable) infectious disease. It is therefore plausible that any large‐scale intervention for H. pylori eradication would result in cleansing the world of the fifth cause of cancer‐related death. Atrophic gastritis is the cancerization field in which GCs (both intestinal and diffuse histotypes) mainly develop. Discontinuing the inflammatory cascade triggered by H. pylori is tantamount to preventing GC. For patients (still infected or eradicated) who have already developed gastric atrophy, the severity/topography of the atrophic changes correlates with their cancer risk. Gastritis OLGA (Operative Link for Gastritis Assessment) staging consistently ranks the atrophy‐associated cancer risk, providing a solid clinical/biological rationale for establishing patient‐specific surveillance programs. By combining primary and secondary prevention strategies, gastric cancer is a preventable disease.  相似文献   

7.

Background

Helicobacter pylori is coexisted with various diseases, including chronic gastritis, ulcer, and gastric cancer. Besides, chronic cholecystitis and cholelithiasis are extremely widespread over the world, which are considered as high health‐care cost burdens of digestive diseases. Epidemiologic evidence on Helicobacter pylori infection in gallbladder increasing the risk of biliary diseases has been contradictory.

Aim

Conduct a meta‐analysis of overall studies and investigate an association between Helicobacter pylori infection of the gallbladder with chronic cholecystitis/cholelithiasis.

Methods

We used PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane library databases to identify all published studies before August 2017. Pooled odds ratios (OR) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were obtained using the random effects model. Heterogeneity, sensitivity, and stratified analyses were also performed.

Results

Eighteen studies involving 1544 participants and 1061 biliary cases with chronic cholecystitis/cholelithiasis were included. Helicobacter pylori infection of the gallbladder was significantly associated with an increased risk of chronic cholecystitis and cholecystitis (OR = 3.022; 95% CI, 1.897‐4.815; I2 = 20.1%). In addition, country‐based subgroup analysis also showed a positive association between Helicobacter pylori positivity and chronic cholecystitis/cholelithiasis risk. The ORs (95% CIs) for Asian and non‐Asian region studies were 3.75 (1.83‐7.71) and 2.25 (1.29‐3.89), respectively.

Conclusion

This meta‐analysis suggests that infection of the gallbladder with Helicobacter pylori is closely related to an increased risk of chronic cholecystitis and cholelithiasis.  相似文献   

8.
9.

Background

Infection with Helicobacter pylori triggers a chronic gastric inflammation that can progress to atrophy and gastric adenocarcinoma. Polarization of macrophages is a characteristic of both cancer and infection, and may promote progression or resolution of disease. However, the role of macrophages and their polarization during H. pylori infection has not been well defined.

Methodology/Principal Findings

By using a mouse model of infection and gastric biopsies from 29 individuals, we have analyzed macrophage recruitment and polarization during H. pylori infection by flow cytometry and real-time PCR. We found a sequential recruitment of neutrophils, eosinophils and macrophages to the gastric mucosa of infected mice. Gene expression analysis of stomach tissue and sorted macrophages revealed that gastric macrophages were polarized to M1 after H. pylori infection, and this process was substantially accelerated by prior vaccination. Human H. pylori infection was characterized by a mixed M1/M2 polarization of macrophages. However, in H. pylori-associated atrophic gastritis, the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase was markedly increased compared to uncomplicated gastritis, indicative of an enhanced M1 macrophage polarization in this pre-malignant lesion.

Conclusions/Significance

These results show that vaccination of mice against H. pylori amplifies M1 polarization of gastric macrophages, and that a similar enhanced M1 polarization is present in human H. pylori-induced atrophic gastritis.  相似文献   

10.
Individuals with chronic atrophic gastritis who are negative for active H. pylori infection with no history of eradication therapy have been identified in clinical practice. By excluding false‐negative and autoimmune gastritis cases, it can be surmised that most of these patients have experienced unintentional eradication of H. pylori after antibiotic treatment for other infectious disease, unreported successful eradication, or H. pylori that spontaneously disappeared. These patients are considered to have previous H. pylori infection–induced atrophic gastritis. In this work, we define these cases based on the following criteria: absence of previous H. pylori eradication; atrophic changes on endoscopy or histologic confirmation of glandular atrophy; negative for a current H. pylori infection diagnosed in the absence of proton‐pump inhibitors or antibiotics; and absence of localized corpus atrophy, positivity for autoantibodies, or characteristic histologic findings suggestive of autoimmune gastritis. The risk of developing gastric cancer depends on the atrophic grade. The reported rate of developing gastric cancer is 0.31%‐0.62% per year for successfully eradicated severely atrophic cases (pathophysiologically equal to unintentionally eradicated cases and unreported eradicated cases), and 0.53%‐0.87% per year for spontaneously resolved cases due to severe atrophy. Therefore, for previous H. pylori infection–induced atrophic gastritis cases, we recommend endoscopic surveillance every 3 years for high‐risk patients, including those with endoscopically severe atrophy or intestinal metaplasia. Because of the difficulty involved in the endoscopic diagnosis of gastric cancer in cases of previous infection, appropriate monitoring of the high‐risk subgroup of this understudied population is especially important.  相似文献   

11.
Background. Dyspepsia is a very common problem in Thailand. Etiology of gastritis, incidence of Helicobacter pylori and mode of transmission of Helicobacter pylori infection in the country was proposed. Methods. A nation‐wide study of gastric biopsy in 3776 dyspeptic patients from six different geographic regions for incidence of gastritis, type of gastritis, incidence of H. pylori infection, gastric atrophic change and intestinal metaplasia in three age‐groups of each region was done. Results. 58.7% of dyspeptic patients had histological gastritis. Pangastritis was the most common type (77.3%) with mostly mild active inflammation (60.6%) and was found most commonly in the age group 31–60 years. Incidence of gastritis was slightly lower in the coastal and peninsular community compared with the mountain, jungle, semiarid plateau and fertile plain communities. Geographic factor, socioeconomic status and dietary habit were proposed to be important factors in inducing gastritis. H. pylori infection was found in 48.2% of dyspeptic patients with high incidence in the age‐group 31–60 years (63.7%) and 98.2% of H. pylori infection was found to be associated with gastritis. Semi‐arid plateau, mountain, jungle and fertile plain communities had high incidences of H. pylori infection varying from 54.0 to 67.1% while the coastal and peninsular communities had low incidences of 32%. Oral to oral spread is proposed to be the mode of bacterial transmission. Incidences of gastric atrophic change and intestinal metaplasia were low in this country and were found in 11.6% and 8.2% of subjects, respectively, with no significantly different distribution in geographic regions. Type I or intestinal type was found to be the most common type of intestinal metaplasia.  相似文献   

12.
Background. Oxidative DNA damage is associated with Helicobacter pylori infection, atrophy and intestinal metaplasia. H. pylori‐cagA‐positive strains are associated with the highest risk of gastric cancer. Aims. To ascertain whether cagA‐positive H. pylori infection correlates with higher concentrations of 8OHdG and the presence of precancerous changes. Patients and Methods. 118 patients were studied (65M/53F, age 61 ± 14 years). Twelve were H. pylori‐negative. Among the H. pylori‐positive patients, 34 were cagA‐positive and 40 were cagA negative. In 32 patients H. pylori had been eradicated at least 6 months before endoscopic sampling. The phenotype of the gastritis (atrophic compared with nonatrophic, with and without intestinal metaplasia) was scored in biopsy samples obtained from the antrum, corpus, and angularis incisura. In antral biopsy samples, 8‐hydroxydeoxyguanosine was assessed by HPLC (electrochemical detector). CagA status was determined by PCR. Results. The highest scores for both mononuclear inflammation and activity of gastritis were significantly associated with cagA status (p = 0.036 antrum and p = 0.02 corpus). cagA‐positive infection significantly correlated with a higher prevalence of atrophic‐metaplastic lesions (p = 0.04). cagA‐positive patients had higher 8‐hydroxydeoxyguanosine levels than both cagA‐negative and H. pylori‐negative cases (p = 0.01). The 8‐hydroxydeoxyguanosine levels were significantly higher in multifocal atrophic gastritis (p = 0.04). The odds ratio for cagA‐positive patients having 8OHdG levels above a cut‐off calculated on the basis of the ROC curves were 7.12, overall, reaching 11.25 when only patients younger than 50 were considered. Conclusions. cagA‐positive patients were characterized: first, for higher scores for gastritis, activity and atrophic and metaplastic lesions; and second for greater oxidative DNA damage overall, at younger age and in the presence of multifocal atrophy. This setting may represent a cancer‐prone biological context.  相似文献   

13.

Background

Garlic may be protective against Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric cancer development. We conducted this study to quantitatively update evidence on garlic intake and gastric cancer with the inclusion of most recent cohort studies and qualitatively summarize epidemiological studies of garlic consumption and Helicobacter pylori infection.

Materials and Methods

PubMed, Embase, MEDLINE, and Cochrane Library were searched on April 2018. We conducted a meta‐analysis to determine whether garlic intake reduced gastric cancer risk using random‐effect models and a systematic review to summarize evidence on the association between garlic consumption and Helicobacter pylori infection. Risk of bias was assessed using tools of Cochrane risk of bias and Robins‐I for randomized and nonrandomized studies, respectively.

Results

Meta‐analysis of 18 studies (142 921 subjects) demonstrated high garlic consumption (as comparing the highest category to the lowest) was associated with a reduced gastric cancer risk (OR = 0.51, 95% CI = 0.44‐0.57). This association became nonsignificant if only derived from the prospective studies (OR = 0.95, 95% CI = 0.66‐1.24). Thirteen studies (4889 participants) were included in the systematic review for garlic consumption and Helicobacter pylori infection; ten of which found no significant results. The majority of these studies were poor in quality given the small sample size and high risk of bias.

Conclusions

Pooled evidence, mainly from case‐control studies, suggested a significant inverse association of garlic intake with gastric cancer risk. Given the limitations of included studies, current epidemiological evidence is not sufficient to reach any definite conclusion regarding the association of garlic with Helicobacter pylori infection.  相似文献   

14.
Background Infection with Helicobacter pylori causes active chronic gastritis. Once the infection is acquired, gastritis will persist for almost the rest of one's life. To date, very few data are available on H. pylori gastritis in relation to age. Therefore, we attempted to inestigate whether H. pylori gastritis in children exhibits features different from H. pylori gastritis in adults of two different age groups. Materials and Methods. Fifty consecutive children with a median age of 11 years (range, 3–18 years) were compared with two groups of 50 adult patients, one group with a median age of 43 (range, 19–56 years) and another group with a median age of 70 years (range, 59–86 years). All patients had H. pylori gastritis unrelated to active peptic ulcer disease. Two biopsy specimens were taken from the antrum and two from the corpus, and the following gastritis parameters were evaluated: degree and activity of gastritis, H. pylori colonization, replacement of foveolar epithelium by regenerative epithelium, mucous depletion, presence of atrophic gastritis with intestinal metaplasia, and presence of lymphoid follicles. Results. Degree and activity of gastritis, extent of H. pylori colonization, degree of replacement by regenerative epithelium, extent of mucous depletion, degree of atrophic gastritis with intestinal metaplasia, and the presence of lymphoid follicles in the antrum, as well as the presence of lymphoid follicles in the corpus differed significantly (chi-square test: p < .05). All these differences—except the once frequent occurrence of atrophic gastritis with intestinal metaplasia in adults—were attributable to a higher expression of these gastritis parameters in children. Conclusions. We conclude that H. pylori gastritis, particularly in the antrum, is more severely expressed in childhood. One reason for this might be a child-specific immune response to an infection with H. pylori. Alternatively, infection may represent a pediatric disease characterized by a nonatrophic, highly expressed form of gastritis, which changes its appearance once the host becomes adapted over time.  相似文献   

15.
Lai YP  Yang JC  Lin TZ  Wang JT  Lin JT 《Helicobacter》2003,8(3):235-243
Background. Tyrosine phosphorylation of Helicobacter pylori cytotoxin‐associated protein of in gastric epithelial cells is reported. The goals of this study are first to examine the occurrence of CagA tyrosine phosphorylation in H. pylori strains isolated from patients with gastric adenocarcinoma and gastritis, and second to clarify the relationship between the diversity of tyrosine phosphorylation motifs and the presence of CagA tyrosine phosphorylation. Methods. Fifty‐eight clinical isolates of H. pylori from patients with gastric adenocarcinoma (29 cases) and gastritis (29 cases) were studied for CagA tyrosine phosphorylation by Western blotting. Sequence diversity of tyrosine phosphorylation motifs was analysed among positive‐ or negative‐CagA tyrosine phosphorylation isolates. Results. Positive CagA tyrosine phosphorylation was found in 93.1% (27 of 29) of strains from gastric adenocarcinoma patients and 51.7% (15 of 29) of strains from gastritis patients (p < 0.001). Intact motifs were found in H. pylori isolates with CagA tyrosine phosphorylation. Of the 16 negative CagA tyrosine phosphorylation isolates, intact tyrosine phosphorylation motifs were found in 15 isolates. Conclusions. CagA tyrosine phosphorylation, which is significantly greater in strains from gastric adenocarcinoma patients, may play a role in gastric carcinogenesis, and could be a better marker of more virulent strains than the cag pathogenicity island in Asia, where the cag pathogenicity island is present in nearly all H. pylori strains. Sequence diversity of tyrosine phosphorylation motifs on CagA was not related to the presence of tyrosine phosphorylation. The absence of tyrosine phosphorylation motif might result in negative tyrosine phosphorylation phenotypes, but such motifs are not the sole factors associated with CagA tyrosine phosphorylation.  相似文献   

16.
Background. Gastric carcinoids are strongly associated with chronic atrophic gastritis A, and it is suggested that hypergastrinemia plays a critical role in development of gastric carcinoids. Since Helicobacter pylori infection causes hypergastrinemia, it is held that H. pylori infection produces gastric carcinoids. We followed the histological changes of H. pylori‐infected stomachs of Mongolian gerbils for a long time. Materials and Methods. Five‐week‐old‐male Mongolian gerbils were infected with H. pylori ATCC 43504 with cagA gene, expressing vacuolating cytotoxin. Determination of the serum gastrin and histopathological examination of the stomach at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months after H. pylori inoculation was studied and compared with uninfected animals . Results In infected animals, the gastric carcinomas appeared 18 and 24 months after infection. Endocrine cell dysplasias and carcinoids with marked atrophic gastritis of the oxyntic mucosa were observed in the infected animals 24 months after H. pylori inoculation. The serum gastrin level in the infected group increased from an average of 86.2 pg/ml at the beginning of the study to an average of 498 pg/ml and 989 pg/ml at 18 and 24 months after infection, respectively. These changes in the serum gastrin levels were significant compared with uninfected controls that showed no changes. Conclusions. H. pylori infection caused not only gastric carcinomas but also enterochromaffin‐like cell tumors in Mongolian gerbils, due to hypergastrinemia. This model is thought to be useful to study the relationship between hypergastrinemia and gastric carcinoids.  相似文献   

17.

Background

Helicobacter pylori is an important etiologic factor for peptic ulcers and gastric cancer, one of the top ten leading causes of cancer death in Puerto Rico. However, the prevalence of H. pylori infections in this population was previously unknown. The aim of this study was to examine the seroprevalence of H. pylori and its associated risk factors in Puerto Rico.

Materials and Methods

A cross‐sectional study was designed using an existing population‐based biorepository. Seropositivity was determined using the Premier? H. pylori immunoassay. Helicobacter pylori seroprevalence was estimated with 95% confidence using marginal standardization following logistic regression. To assess the risk factors associated with H. pylori seropositivity, a multivariable log‐binomial model was fitted to estimate the prevalence ratio (PR) and its 95% confidence interval (95% CI).

Results

A total of 528 population‐based serum samples were analyzed. The mean age of the study population was 41 ± 12 years, of whom 55.3% were females. The overall seroprevalence of H. pylori was 33.0% (95% CI = 28.3%‐38.1%). Increasing age and having <12 years of education were significantly (P < .05) associated with H. pylori seropositivity in the multivariable model; however, residing in counties with low population density reached marginal significance (P = .085).

Conclusions

We report that H. pylori infection is common among Hispanics living in Puerto Rico. The H. pylori seroprevalence observed in Puerto Rico is similar to the seroprevalence reported in the overall population of the United States. The association between H. pylori seroprevalence and the risk factors analyzed offers insight into the epidemiology of gastric cancer in Puerto Rico and warrants further investigation.
  相似文献   

18.

Background

Double-contrast upper gastrointestinal barium X-ray radiography (UGI-XR) is one of the most widely conducted gastric cancer screening methods. It has been executed to find gastric cancer, but has not been usually executed to detect premalignant atrophic mucosa of stomach. To understand the meaning of UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis, we analyzed its association with several causative factors including Helicobacter pylori (HP) infection.

Methods

We evaluated 6,901 healthy adults in Japan. UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis was diagnosed based on the irregular shape of areae gastricae and its expansion in the stomach.

Results

Of the 6,433 subjects with no history of HP eradication and free from gastric acid suppressants, 1,936 were diagnosed as UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis (mild: 234, moderate: 822, severe: 880). These were univariately associated with serum HP IgG and serum pepsinogen I/II ratio with statistical significance. The multiple logistic analysis calculating standardized coefficients (β) and odds ratio (OR) demonstrated that serum HP IgG (β = 1.499, OR = 4.48), current smoking (β = 0.526, OR = 1.69), age (β = 0.401, OR = 1.49), low serum pepsinogen I/II ratio (β = 0.339, OR = 1.40), and male gender (β = 0.306, OR = 1.36) showed significant positive association with UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis whereas drinking and body mass index did not. Among the age/sex/smoking/drinking-matched 227 pairs derived from chronically HP-infected and successfully HP-eradicated subjects, UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis was detected in 99.1% of the former but in only 59.5% of the latter subjects (p<0.0001). Contrastively, UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis was detected in 13 of 14 HP-positive proton pump inhibitor users (92.9%) and 33 of 34 HP-positive histamine H2-receptor antagonist users (97.1%), which are not significantly different from gastric acid suppressant-free subjects.

Conclusions

The presence of UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis is positively associated with Helicobacter pylori infection, current smoking, age, decreased serum pepsinogen I/II ratio, and male gender. Eradication of Helicobacter pylori seems to superficially improve UGI-XR-based atrophic gastritis whereas intake of gastric acid suppressants does not.  相似文献   

19.
20.

Background

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection is associated with the development of gastric cancer, although the mechanism is unclear. Herein, this study aimed to clarify the key genes and signaling pathways involved in H. pylori pathogenesis based on The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database and RNA sequencing analysis.

Materials and Methods

Forty‐nine gastric cancer samples (16 with H. pylori and 33 without H. pylori) and 35 cancer‐adjacent normal samples from TCGA database were analyzed by bioinformatics. The differentially expressed genes between H. pylori‐positive and H. pylori‐negative patients were verified in 18 gastric cancer (GC) samples (9 with H. pylori and 9 without H. pylori), which were analyzed using RNA sequencing. Survival analysis was carried out to explore associations between the differentially expressed genes and prognosis. Bioinformatics analysis was performed to determine the signaling pathways associated with H. pylori.

Results

The baseline level of clinical features from TCGA database and RNA sequencing showed no differences between the H. pylori‐positive and H. pylori‐negative GC groups (> 0.05). TP53 was shown to be upregulated in the H. pylori‐positive group in both TCGA database and RNA sequencing data, which also showed higher expression in the GC tissues than in adjacent normal tissues (< 0.05). CCDC151, CHRNB2, GMPR2, HDGFRP2, and VSTM2L were shown to be downregulated in the H. pylori‐positive group by both TCGA database and RNA sequencing, which also showed lower expression in the GC tissues than in adjacent normal tissues (< 0.05). GC patients with low expression levels of HDGFRP2 had a poor prognosis (< 0.05). Thirty‐three signaling pathways and 10 biological processes were found to be positively associated with H. pylori infection (< 0.05, FDR < 0.05).

Conclusions

These results indicate that some genes (TP53, CCDC151, CHRNB2, GMPR2, HDGFRP2, VSTM2L) and previously unidentified signaling pathways (eg, the Hippo signaling pathway) might play an important role in H. pylori‐associated GC.  相似文献   

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