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Helicobacter pylori and gastric cancer

Authoring team

  • Helicobacter pylori is a Gram-negative, spiral-shaped bacterium that has adapted to survive in the harsh acidic environment of the human stomach
  • there is evidence of a causal association between H.pylori and cancer of the gastric corpus and antrum (1,2)
  • the incidence of gastric cancer of the gastric corpus and gastric antrum are declining in areas where H.pylori infection is becoming less prevalent
  • virulent strains of H pylori producing VacA or CagA cause indirect inflammation of the gastric mucosa and direct epigenetic changes in the epithelial cells, promoting malignant transformation (3)
  • prophylactic eradication of H pylori after endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer helps to prevent the development of metachronous gastric carcinoma (2)
  • less than 5% of individuals with H pylori infection will develop gastric cancer (3)

The ACG Clinical Guideline lists specific indications for H. pylori testing and treatment(4):

1. Benign / non-cancer conditions

  • peptic ulcer disease (active or past)
  • gastric MALT (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue) lymphoma, low-grade B-cell
  • uninvestigated dyspepsia: patients < 60 years old, without alarm features
    • for high-risk gastric cancer populations, a lower age threshold (~45–50 years) may be used
  • functional dyspepsia (symptoms without structural disease)
  • adult household members of someone who tests positive (non-serological) for H. pylori
  • long-term NSAID users, or people starting low-dose aspirin therapy
  • unexplained iron deficiency anaemia (IDA)
  • idiopathic (autoimmune) thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)

2. Premalignant / Malignant / Cancer-Prevention Conditions
(“Primary and secondary prevention of gastric adenocarcinoma”)
This includes:

  • people with gastric premalignant conditions (GPMC): such as atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia
  • people with history of early gastric cancer (resection)
  • those with prior or current gastric adenocarcinoma
  • people with gastric adenomas or hyperplastic polyps, since these often occur in inflamed mucosa.
  • first-degree relatives of gastric cancer patients.
  • individuals at increased risk of gastric cancer based on ethnicity, geography, or hereditary risk (e.g. immigrants from high-incidence regions).
  • autoimmune gastritis

Reference:

  1. Drug and Therapeutic Bulletin (1998); 36 (8): 57-9.
  2. Fukase K, Kato M, Kikuchi S, Inoue K, Uemura N, Okamoto S, Terao S, Amagai K, Hayashi S, Asaka M; Japan Gast Study Group.Effect of eradication of Helicobacter pylori on incidence of metachronous gastric carcinoma after endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer: an open-label, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2008 Aug 2;372(9636):392-7.
  3. Ghaffar S A, McCarter M D, Kim S S, Bilal M, Del Chiaro M, Mungo B et al. Advances in the management of gastric cancer.BMJ 2025; 391.
  4. Chey WD, Howden CW, Moss SF, Morgan DR, Greer KB, Grover S, Shah SC. ACG Clinical Guideline: Treatment of Helicobacter pylori Infection. Am J Gastroenterol. 2024 Sep 1;119(9):1730-1753.

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