Carcinogenic Helicobacter pylori in gastric pre-cancer and cancer lesions: Association with tobacco-chewing |
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Authors: | Arvind Pandey Satyendra Chandra Tripathi Sutapa Mahata Kanchan Vishnoi Shirish Shukla Sri Prakash Misra Vatsala Misra Suresh Hedau Ravi Mehrotra Manisha DwivediZ Alok C Bharti Divisionof Molecular Oncology |
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Affiliation: | Department of Gastroenterology,MLN Medical College,Allahabad 211002,India;Department of Pathology,MLN Medical College,Allahabad 211002,India; |
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Abstract: | AIM: To investigate the low gastric cancer incidence rate relative to the highly prevalent Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection; data relevant to H. pylori infection during gastric carcinogenesis in Indian patients is currently lacking.METHODS: The present study examines the prevalence of H. pylori infection in DNA derived from 156 endoscopic gastric biopsies of different disease groups that represent gastric pre-cancer [intestinal metaplasia (n = 15), dysplasia (n = 15)], cancer [diffuse adenocarcinoma (n = 44), intestinal adenocarcinoma (n = 21)], and symptomatic but histopathologically-normal controls (n = 61). This was done by generic ureC polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and cagA-specific PCR that could specifically identify the carcinogenic H. pylori strain.RESULTS: Our analysis showed the presence of H. pylori infection in 61% of symptomatic histopathologically-normal individuals, however only 34% of control tissues were harboring the cagA+ H. pylori strain. A similar proportion of H. pylori infection (52%) and cagA (26%) positivity was observed in the tumor tissue of the gastric cancer group. In comparison, H. pylori infection (90%) and cagA positivity (73%) were the highest in gastric pre-cancer lesions. In relation to tobacco and alcohol abuse, H. pylori infection showed an association with tobacco chewing, whereas we did not observe any association between tobacco smoking or alcohol abuse with prevalence of H. pylori infection in the tissue of any of the patient groups studied.CONCLUSION: High incidence of H. pylori infection and carcinogenic cagA positive strain in pre-cancer lesions during gastric carcinogenesis may be associated with the habit of chewing tobacco. |
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Keywords: | UreC CagA Dysplasia Intestinal metaplasia Gastric adenocarcinoma Tobacco chewing |
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