AI Article Synopsis

  • A study investigated how common atrophic corpus gastritis is in a Western European primary care community and its relationship with Helicobacter pylori infection and autoimmunity.
  • Out of 997 participants, 34 (3.4%) showed signs of atrophic corpus gastritis, with some also testing positive for H. pylori and a notable number having antibodies to parietal cells.
  • The findings suggest that antibodies to parietal cells significantly increase the risk of atrophic corpus gastritis compared to H. pylori, which may become less relevant as H. pylori infections decline in the western population.

Article Abstract

Background: Atrophic corpus gastritis predisposes to vitamin B12 deficiency and gastric cancer. Little is known about the seroprevalence of atrophic corpus gastritis in the general population of Western Europe.

Aim: To investigate the seroprevalence of atrophic corpus gastritis in a West-European primary care community in relation to Helicobacter pylori infection and autoimmunity.

Methods: Nine hundred and ninety-seven consecutive persons attending one general practice were asked to participate in the study by completing a questionnaire and donating fasting blood. Gastrin, pepsinogen A and C, and antibodies to H. pylori and parietal cells were measured by well-validated immunological methods. Criteria for serological atrophic corpus gastritis were pepsinogen A < 17 microg/l, pepsinogen A/C ratio <1.6, and gastrin >100 ng/l.

Results: Thirty-four participants (3.4%) fulfilled the serological criteria of atrophic corpus gastritis. Twenty-one of them (62%) and 17 of 34 (50%) age-matched and sex-matched nested controls were H. pylori positive [NS; odds ratio, 1.62 (0.62-4.24)], while 15 of them (44%) and one of 34 controls had antibodies to parietal cells [P < 0.005; odds ratio, 24.0 (3.00-201)].

Conclusions: The seroprevalence of atrophic corpus gastritis in this primary care community is 3.4%. When compared with controls, the approximate relative risk of having atrophic corpus gastritis was significantly higher (P < 0.025) for antibodies to parietal cells (24.0) than to H. pylori (1.62). In view of the decreasing risk of H. pylori infection in the western world, it is likely that the impact of H. pylori on the development of atrophic corpus gastritis will further diminish.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00042737-200608000-00018DOI Listing

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