Gut Liver.  2024 May;18(3):457-464. 10.5009/gnl230211.

Helicobacter pylori Infection Status and Gastric Tumor Incidence According to the Year of Birth

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Konkuk University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

Abstract

Background/Aims
The prevalence of Helicobacter pylori-naive status is increasing. Nonetheless, biennial gastroscopy is recommended for all Koreans aged 40 to 75 years. This study aimed to determine whether gastric cancer screening guidelines could be changed according to H.pylori infection status and year of birth.
Methods
Koreans who underwent serum assays and gastroscopy for gastric cancer screening between 2010 and 2016 were included if screening tests were followed up for ≥3 times. H. pylori infection was confirmed when invasive tests or 13 C-urea breath tests were positive. In the case of negative test findings, eradication history, serologically detected atrophy, and intestinal metaplasia/atrophy were checked for past infection. If all were absent, H. pylori-naive status was confirmed.
Results
Two-thousand and two (256 H. pylori-naive, 743 past-infected, and 1,003 infected) Koreans underwent screening tests for 95.5±28.4 months. The mean year of birth in the naive group (1969±7) differed from those of the past-infected (1957±10, p<0.001) and infected (1958±10, p<0.001) groups. H. pylori-naive status was correlated with recent year of birth (r=0.368, p<0.001). No gastric tumors were observed among the naive participants (p=0.007), whereas 23 adenomas, 18 adenocarcinomas, and two neuroendocrine tumors were detected in 1.9% (14/743) of past-infected and 2.5% (25/1,003) of infected participants, including four infected participants with metachronous tumors.
Conclusions
The prevalence of H. pylori-naive status is increasing in young Koreans, and gastric tumors are rare in this population. Hence, biennial gastroscopy could be waived after the confirmation of naive status.

Keyword

Helicobacter pylori; Stomach neoplasms; Screening
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