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Effect of Helicobacter pylori infection and its eradication on cell proliferation, DNA status, and oncogene expression in patients with chronic gastritis.

Authors :
G, Nardone
S, Staibano
A, Rocco
E, Mezza
P, D'armiento F
L, Insabato
A, Coppola
G, Salvatore
A, Lucariello
N, Figura
G, De Rosa
G, Budillon
Source :
Gut; June 1, 1999, Vol. 44 Issue: 6 p789-99, 11p
Publication Year :
1999

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori, the main cause of chronic gastritis, is a class I gastric carcinogen. Chronic gastritis progresses to cancer through atrophy, metaplasia, and dysplasia. Precancerous phenotypic expression is generally associated with acquired genomic instability. AIM: To evaluate the effect of H pylori infection and its eradication on gastric histology, cell proliferation, DNA status, and oncogene expression. METHODS/SUBJECTS: Morphometric and immunohistochemical techniques were used to examine gastric mucosal biopsy specimens from eight controls, 10 patients with H pylori negative chronic gastritis, 53 with H pylori positive chronic gastritis, and 11 with gastric cancer. RESULTS: All patients with chronic gastritis were in a hyperproliferative state related to mucosal inflammation, regardless of H pylori infection. Atrophy was present in three of 10 patients with H pylori negative chronic gastritis and in 26 of 53 with H pylori positive chronic gastritis, associated in 18 with intestinal metaplasia. DNA content was abnormal in only 11 patients with atrophy and H pylori infection; eight of these also had c-Myc expression, associated in six cases with p53 expression. Fifty three patients with H pylori positive chronic gastritis were monitored for 12 months after antibiotic treatment: three dropped out; infection was eradicated in 45, in whom cell proliferation decreased in parallel with the reduction in gastritis activity; atrophy previously detected in 21/45 disappeared in five, regressed from moderate to mild in nine, and remained unchanged in seven; complete metaplasia disappeared in 4/14, and markers of genomic instability disappeared where previously present. In the five patients in whom H pylori persisted, atrophy, metaplasia, dysplasia, and markers of genomic instability remained unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Chronic H pylori infection seems to be responsible for genomic instability in a subset of cases of H pylori positive chronic atrophic gastritis; eradication of H pylori infection can reverse inflammation and the related atrophy, metaplasia, and genomic instability.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
44
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs6585558