Abstract
A hospital-based cross-sectional study in SIGES project was conducted during 2016.5–2017.5 in West China Hospital. It was aimed to observe the prevalence of atrophic gastritis (AG) in southwest China, and assess the diagnostic strength of serum gastrin-17 (G-17) in predicting AG in Chinese population. Asymptomatic healthy controls from health check-up, cancer-free patients with unspecific upper gastrointestinal symptoms, and histologically proven gastric cancer patients were eligible, if serum pepsinogen-I (PG-I), PG-II, and G-17 were detected. AG status was classified by the accredited cutoffs of PG-I (<70 ug/L) and PG-I/II ratio (<3). Totally, healthy controls (n = 9,425), symptomatic patients (n = 671) and gastric cancer patients (n = 305) were simultaneously observed, in which the prevalence of AG in southwest China were estimated as 15.9/1,000, 28.3/1,000, and 55.7/1,000 persons, respectively. The age-specific prevalence of AG in healthy controls showed a significantly uphill trend (p for trend <0.001). Higher level of serum G-17 was significantly associated with increased risk of AG in healthy population (15–30 pmol/L, aOR = 20.67, 95% CI 9.17–46.55; >30 pmol/L, aOR = 314.41, 95% CI 166.10–595.12). Throughout the progression of stomach diseases, the diagnostic strength of serum G-17 for AG showed a downhill trend across more advanced situations. In despite of that, serum G-17 displayed a good performance in predicting AG in the entire cross-sectional population (AUC = 0.92, 95% CI 0.89–0.94; SEN = 85.5%; SPE = 93.2%; LR+ = 12.55; LR− = 0.11). Population in southwest China had intermediate prevalence of AG, while the prevalence was increased over age or disease progression. High level of serum G-17 might be a reliable non-invasive measurement to predict AG in southwest Chinese population.
Highlights
Atrophic gastritis is a well-established precursor of intestinal-type gastric cancer
The European Helicobacter Study Group agreed on the statement “Serologic screening is suitable for clinical use in countries with a relatively low incidence of gastric cancer, because it enables endoscopic follow-up of caseswith an abnormal serologic profile suggesting atrophic gastritis”[6]
The prevalence of atrophic gastritis were 15.9 per 1,000 persons in healthy population, 28.3 per 1,000 persons in upper GI symptomatic patients, and 55.7 per 1,000 persons in gastric cancer patients, respectively (Fig. 2)
Summary
Atrophic gastritis is a well-established precursor of intestinal-type gastric cancer. The China Consensus on Early Gastric Cancer Screening, Endoscopic Diagnosis and Treatment (2014) recommended to define patients with atrophic gastritis as a kind of high-risk candidates for gastric cancer screening[5]. The European Helicobacter Study Group agreed on the statement “Serologic screening is suitable for clinical use in countries with a relatively low incidence of gastric cancer, because it enables endoscopic follow-up of caseswith an abnormal serologic profile suggesting atrophic gastritis”[6]. Regarding the great health burden from gastric cancer in China[9,10], the relatively low proportion of early gastric cancer[7,11], it would be necessary to investigate the relevant screening strategy covering precancerous lesions based on Chinese population. Pepsinogens was recommended as useful biomarkers to reflect gastric atrophy and identify high-risk subpopulation for gastric cancer by an Asia-Pacific consensus[17]. The SIGES project was aimed to investigate the prevalence of atrophic gastritis in southwest China, and simultaneously assess the diagnostic strength of serum G-17 in predicting atrophic gastritis in healthy persons, symptomatic cancer-free patients, and gastric cancer patients
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