Clinical Gastroenterology Vol.19 No.5(4)

Theme H.pylori Negative Upper Gastroenterological Diseases; Increasing of Their Incidence in the 21st Century
Title Helicobacter pylori Negative Gastric Cancer in Japan
Publish Date 2004/05
Author Shunji Kato Surgery for Organ Function and Biological Regulation, Nippon Medical School
Author Norio Matsukura Surgery for Organ Function and Biological Regulation, Nippon Medical School
Author Zenya Naito Integrative Pathology, Nippon Medical School
Author Takashi Tajiri Surgery for Organ Function and Biological Regulation, Nippon Medical School
[ Summary ] Even though detection systems for Helicobacter pylori (H.pylori) infection-negative status in patients have not been established, only 2% of cases out of all gastric cancer patients are reported to be H.pylori negative, when there is pathological analysis of the gastric mucosa after gastrectomy. Also only 2% of the early gastric cancer patients were reported to be H.pylori negative as detected by multiple detection systems. In our experience, only 4% of almost 800 primary gastric cancer patients were H.pylori negative, displaying neither the anti-H.pylori antibodies noratrophy in the gastric mucosa detected by biomarkers for pepsinogen I and pepsinogen I/II ratio. On the other hand, the Epstein-Barr (EB) virus is related to cases of gastric carcinogenesis, in affected populations reported, and is approximately 2 to 16% of these cases world wide. In our study for cardiac gastric cancers or secondary cancers in the remnant stomach, EB virus tested positive in 34% of the cases, in which, one forth were H.pylori negative patients. Both EB virus and H.pylori negative cases were 11% of the total. A small fraction of the gastric cancer patients displayed multi-factorial carcinogenesis without infection.
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