Long-term proton pump inhibitor administration, H pylori and gastric cancer: lessons from the gerbil

The association between chronic active gastritis and pre-neoplastic conditions as well as invasive cancer of the stomach was established several decades ago. The risk of progression depended on the severity and distribution of gastritis, with cancer, in particular, occurring in subjects with pan-gas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fox, James G., Kuipers, Ernst J.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: British Medical Association 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/63604
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9307-6116
Description
Summary:The association between chronic active gastritis and pre-neoplastic conditions as well as invasive cancer of the stomach was established several decades ago. The risk of progression depended on the severity and distribution of gastritis, with cancer, in particular, occurring in subjects with pan-gastritis. Subsequently, Helicobacter pylori was recognised as the primary cause of chronic active gastritis, and it was demonstrated that the pattern of gastritis corresponded with the colonisation pattern of H pylori. We and others then showed both in animals and in humans that this pattern of colonisation and associated gastritis primarily depended on the level of acid output. 1 2 Although this hypothesis was widely accepted, it led to intense debate when dealing with the safety of long-term treatment with profound acid suppressors. An elegant, long-awaited study from Japan published in this issue of Gut ( see page 624) provides compelling evidence that the pattern of H pylori colonisation depends on acid output and that this influences the long-term progression to neoplasia. The current study was based on experiments in gerbils, one of the well-established animal models for the study gastric disease induced by Helicobacter spp.