AI Article Synopsis

  • Gastric cancer arises from factors like H. pylori infection, dietary carcinogens, and genetics, prompting a study in rhesus monkeys to assess these roles.
  • The study involved 23 monkeys divided into groups to receive different treatments, with regular follow-up for gastric changes over 5 years.
  • Results showed that the combination of H. pylori and a carcinogen led to significant precancerous changes, indicating a synergistic effect in developing gastric neoplasia in primates.

Article Abstract

Background & Aims: Gastric cancer results from a combination of Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) infection, exposure to dietary carcinogens, and predisposing genetic make-up. Because the role of these factors in gastric carcinogenesis cannot be determined readily in human beings, the present study examined the role of an oral carcinogen and H pylori infection in rhesus monkeys.

Methods: Gastroscopies were performed in 23 monkeys assigned to 4 groups: controls; nitrosating carcinogen ethyl-nitro-nitrosoguanidine administration alone; inoculation of a virulent H pylori strain alone (H); and ethyl-nitro-nitrosoguanidine in combination with H pylori (EH). Follow-up gastroscopies and biopsies were performed at 3-month intervals for 5 years for pathologic and molecular studies.

Results: Postinoculation, H and EH groups showed persistent infection and antral gastritis. Starting at 2 and 5 years, respectively, gastric intestinal metaplasia and intraepithelial neoplasia developed in 3 EH monkeys but in no other groups. Transcriptional analysis of biopsy specimens at 5 years revealed group-specific expression profiles, with striking changes in EH monkeys, plus a neoplasia-specific expression profile characterized by changes in multiple cancer-associated genes. Importantly, this neoplastic profile was evident in nonneoplastic mucosa, suggesting that the identified genes may represent markers preceding cancer.

Conclusions: Gastric intraglandular neoplasia is induced in primates when H pylori infection is associated with consumption of a carcinogen similar to the nitrosamines found in pickled vegetables, suggesting that H pylori and the carcinogen synergistically induce gastric neoplasia in primates.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2774828PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2009.07.041DOI Listing

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