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Research Article

Difference in Degree of Mucosal Atrophy between Elevated and Depressed Types of Gastric Epithelial Tumors

Pages 1134-1140 | Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Background: The significance of atrophy in the background mucosa and Helicobacter pylori infection in the morphogenesis of gastric epithelial tumors has not yet been investigated. Methods: The degree of mucosal atrophy, as determined by a histological analysis and the serum pepsinogen (PG) levels, and H. pylori status were investigated in patients with elevated adenoma (EA group; n = 40), elevated early cancer of intestinal type (ECI group; n = 30), depressed early cancer of intestinal type (DCI group; n = 37) and depressed early cancer of diffuse type (DCD group; n = 33), and the findings were then compared to those in 91 controls. Results: At all sites of the stomach, the histologic score of atrophy was higher in the EA group and in the ECI group than in the controls. In the DCI group, the histologic score of atrophy in the antrum was higher than in the controls, but no such difference in the score was found in the DCD group. The PG I/II ratios in the EA, ECI and DCI groups were significantly lower than in the controls, and the value was also different between the ECI and DCI groups. While H. pylori prevalence was higher in all groups than in the controls, a logistic regression analysis which included the grade of atrophy as a determinant revealed the infection to be an independent associated factor for the DCD group. Conclusions: The difference in the background mucosal atrophy seems to contribute to different macroscopic types in gastric epithelial tumors. This seems to be the case especially for cancer of intestinal type.

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