Abstract

AimTo assess the time trend of diagnostic accuracy of pre- and post-eradication H. pylori status and interobserver agreement of gastric atrophy grading.MethodsA series 100 of conventional endoscopic image sets taken from subjects undergoing gastric cancer screening at a polyclinic were evaluated by 5 experienced assessors. Each assessor independently examined endoscopic findings according to the Kyoto classification and then determined the H. pylori status (never, current, or past infected). Gastric atrophy was assessed according to the Kimura-Takemoto classification and classified into 3 grades (none/mild, moderate, or severe). The image series that ≥3 assessors considered to have good quality were arbitrarily defined as high-quality image (HQI) series, and the rest were defined as low-quality image (LQI) series.ResultsThe overall diagnostic accuracy of H. pylori status was 83.0%. It was lowest in subjects with current infection (54%), gradually increased at 1 year (79%, P < 0.001) and 3 years (94.0%, P = 0.002), but then did not significantly change at 5 years (91.0%, P = 0.420) after eradication. The rate of LQI series was 28%. The overall diagnostic accuracy of H. pylori status dropped from 88.9% to 67.9% (P < 0.001), and the mean kappa value on gastric atrophy grading dropped from 0.730 to 0.580 (P = 0.002) in the HQI and LQI series, respectively.ConclusionsDiagnostic accuracy of H. pylori status increased over time after eradication. LQI series badly affected the diagnostic accuracy of H. pylori status and the level of agreement when grading gastric atrophy.

Highlights

  • Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection is the most consistent risk factor for gastric cancer [1]

  • The accuracies of diagnosis of H. pylori infection by each assessor ranged from 97.0% to 100% (Figure 2)

  • The accuracies of diagnosis of H. pylori status by each assessor were lower, ranging from 80.0% to 90.0%

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Summary

Introduction

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection is the most consistent risk factor for gastric cancer [1]. The cancer rarely develops in subjects never infected with H. pylori, and in infected patients, the risk level correlates with the severity and extent of gastric atrophy [2, 3]. H. pylori eradication is most beneficial for gastric cancer prevention before the development of severe precancerous lesions [1, 4]. Several cohort studies showed that gastric cancer still occurred after eradication in patients with severe and extensive atrophy, and these patients still need to receive endoscopic surveillance [6]. The diagnosis of H. pylori infection status (i.e., current, past, or never infected) and grading of gastric atrophy are, important issues in the screening and surveillance for gastric cancer

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