Severity of gastric intestinal metaplasia predicts the risk of gastric cancer: a prospective multicentre cohort study (GCEP).
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Date
2021-05-11ICR Author
Author
Lee, JWJ
Zhu, F
Srivastava, S
Tsao, SK
Khor, C
Ho, KY
Fock, KM
Lim, WC
Ang, TL
Chow, WC
So, JBY
Koh, CJ
Chua, SJ
Wong, ASY
Rao, J
Lim, LG
Ling, KL
Chia, C-K
Ooi, CJ
Rajnakova, A
Yap, WM
Salto-Tellez, M
Ho, B
Soong, R
Chia, KS
Teo, YY
Teh, M
Yeoh, K-G
Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the incidence of gastric cancer (GC) attributed to gastric intestinal metaplasia (IM), and validate the Operative Link on Gastric Intestinal Metaplasia (OLGIM) for targeted endoscopic surveillance in regions with low-intermediate incidence of GC. METHODS: A prospective, longitudinal and multicentre study was carried out in Singapore. The study participants comprised 2980 patients undergoing screening gastroscopy with standardised gastric mucosal sampling, from January 2004 and December 2010, with scheduled surveillance endoscopies at year 3 and 5. Participants were also matched against the National Registry of Diseases Office for missed diagnoses of early gastric neoplasia (EGN). RESULTS: There were 21 participants diagnosed with EGN. IM was a significant risk factor for EGN (adjusted-HR 5.36; 95% CI 1.51 to 19.0; p<0.01). The age-adjusted EGN incidence rates for patients with and without IM were 133.9 and 12.5 per 100 000 person-years. Participants with OLGIM stages III-IV were at greatest risk (adjusted-HR 20.7; 95% CI 5.04 to 85.6; p<0.01). More than half of the EGNs (n=4/7) attributed to baseline OLGIM III-IV developed within 2 years (range: 12.7-44.8 months). Serum trefoil factor 3 distinguishes (Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristics 0.749) patients with OLGIM III-IV if they are negative for H. pylori. Participants with OLGIM II were also at significant risk of EGN (adjusted-HR 7.34; 95% CI 1.60 to 33.7; p=0.02). A significant smoking history further increases the risk of EGN among patients with OLGIM stages II-IV. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest a risk-stratified approach and recommend that high-risk patients (OLGIM III-IV) have endoscopic surveillance in 2 years, intermediate-risk patients (OLGIM II) in 5 years.
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Research team
Integrated Pathology
Integrated Pathology
Language
eng
Date accepted
2021-04-30
License start date
2021-05-11
Citation
Gut, 2021
Publisher
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP