Affiliation:
1. Služba za patohistologiju, Klinički centar Srbije, Beograd
Abstract
Recent epidemiological studies in Serbia revealed that gastric carcinoma is
the third and the fifth main cause of cancer morbidity in men and women,
respectively. Despite the declining incidence of gastric cancer, it remains
the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths as it is worldwide. A
well-defined carcinogenic inflammation-metaplasia-dysplasia-cancer sequence
typically precedes the development of most gastric adenocarcinomas.
Alterations such as gastric mucosal atrophy and intestinal metaplasia are
merely markers of increased risk, while gastric epithelial dysplasia (GED)
represent a direct precursor of cancer. DNA damage and increased mucosal
proliferation secondary to H pylori infection, combined with a suitable host
susceptibility phenotype (eg, genetic polymorphisms in interleukin IL-1B,
IL-1RN, and tumor necrosis factor a TNF-a genes), are important factors in
this progression pathway. However, only a small minority of patients infected
with H. pylori eventually develops gastric cancer, and eradication of H
pylori in these patients does not seem to eliminate the risk of cancer
completely. It has been shown that atrophy may be a better indicator of risk
of cancer than intestinal metaplasia, and remains to be validated in routine
clinical practice according to recent proposal for new quantitative methods.
It is often associated with pseudopyloric gland metaplasia in the gastric
corpus mucosa, which expresses a type of trefoil peptide, the spasmolytic
polypeptide (termed spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia or SPEM)
and has been shown to be linked more closely to gastric cancer than
intestinal metaplasia. Better histological characterization of adenomatous
(or type I), hyperplastic (foveolar or type II) and tubule-neck (mucocellular
or type III) GED, two-tiered grading system (low and high grade dysplasia) as
well as the introduction of Padova and Vienna international classificatons of
dysplasia seem to be more helpful in GED survillance and comparative studies.
A combination of histopathological features, serum markers such as pepsinogen
I, and molecular tests that analyze host susceptibility polymorphisms and
bacterial virulence factors, may allow development of strategies for early
detection of cancer in the future. At present, pathobiology of gastric
cancerogenesis is far from known, despite the progressive knowlegde on
predisposing environmental conditions and genetic and epigenetic
abnormalities, including tumour supressor genes, oncogenes, microsatellite
instability and hypermethylation or the significance of E-cadherin mutational
status association with hereditary diffuse gastric cancer syndrome. Recent
evidence regarding the importance of several histopathologically derived
prognostic factors, such as resection margin status and lymph node metastases
and their implications have also been discussed. We aim to review these
aspects, with special relevance to gastric cancer specimen reporting.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
2 articles.
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