Non-invasive diagnosis of gastric mucosal atrophy in an asyptomatic population with high prevalence of gastric cancer

Rollan, A; Ferreccio C.; Gederlini, A; Serrano, C.; Harris P.; Torres J.

Keywords: sensitivity, validation, chile, hormone, survival, population, antibody, research, infection, aging, blood, diagnosis, risk, disease, histopathology, specificity, cancer, endoscopy, gastrointestinal, humans, human, male, level, aged, prognosis, measurement, neoplasms, adult, female, stomach, mucosa, article, bacterium, incidence, values, factor, variance, process, analysis, accuracy, assessment, atrophy, pepsinogen, gastrin, invasive, controlled, helicobacter, pylori, clinical, diagnostic, factors, c, value, gastric, study, reference, middle, of, Rate, a, socioeconomics, and, I, High, titer, Aged,, 80, over, non, early, ii, Gastrins, 17

Abstract

Aim: To validate a non-invasive method to detect gastric mucosal atrophy in a Chilean population with high prevalence of gastric cancer and a poor survival rate. Methods: We first determined the optimal cut-off level of serum pepsinogen (PG)-1, PG-1/PG-2 ratio and 17-gastrin in 31 voluntary symptomatic patients (mean age: 66.1 years), of them 61% had histologically confirmed gastric atrophy. Then, in a population-based sample of 536 healthy individuals (209 residents in counties with higher relative risk and 327 residents in counties with lower relative risk for gastric cancer), we measured serum anti-H pylori antibodies, PG and 17-gastrin and estimated their risk of gastric cancer. Results: We found that serum PG-1 < 61.5 μg/L, PG-1/PG-2 ratio < 2.2 and 17-gastrin > 13.3 pmol/L had a high specificity (91%-100%) and a fair sensitivity (56%-78%) to detect corpus-predominant atrophy. Based on low serum PG-1 and PG-1/PG-2 ratio together as diagnostic criteria, 12.5% of the asymptomatic subjects had corpus-predominant atrophy (0% of those under 25 years and 20.2% over 65 years old). The frequency of gastric atrophy was similar (12% vs 13%) but H pylori infection rate was slightly higher (77% vs 71%) in the high-risk compared to the low-risk counties. Based on their estimated gastric cancer risk, individuals were classified as: low-risk group (no H pylod infection and no atrophy; n = 115; 21.4%); moderate-risk group (H pylori infection but no atrophy; n = 354, 66.0%); and high-risk group (gastric atrophy, with or without H pylori infection; n = 67, 12.5%). The high-risk group was significantly older (mean age: 61.9 ± 13.3 years), more frequently men and less educated as compared with the low-risk group. Conclusion: We propose to concentrate on an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for detection of early gastric cancer in the high-risk group. This intervention model could-improve the poor prognosis of gastric cancer in Chile. © 2006 The WJG Press. All rights reserved.

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Título según SCOPUS: Non-invasive diagnosis of gastric mucosal atrophy in an asyptomatic population with high prevalence of gastric cancer
Título de la Revista: WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volumen: 12
Número: 44
Editorial: BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
Fecha de publicación: 2006
Página de inicio: 7172
Página final: 7178
Idioma: eng
URL: http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-33845444155&partnerID=q2rCbXpz
Notas: SCOPUS