Serum pepsinogen values are markers of gastric mucosal status and of gastric cancer risk. The effect of Helicobacter pylori infection and sibship size on change of serum pepsinogen values over a seven-year span was investigated. Data from 2584 subjects with phlebotomy were analyzed both in 1989 and in 1996. The subjects were classified by H. pylori serology and sibship size (1-3 vs. 4 and more). Pepsinogen I (PG I) to II (PG II) ratio in '96 minus that in '89 was defined as ΔPG I/II and compared among the groups. ΔPG I/II was lower and decrease of PG I/II was more frequent among H. pylori-positive subjects than among negative subjects. The difference was owing to a decrease of PG I in all subjects and owing to an increase of PG II in those not younger than 30 years in '89. In H. pylori-positive subjects, those with a larger sibship size showed lower ΔPG I/II and higher frequency of PG I/II decline. H. pylori infection exerts a reducing effect on PG I/II during the seven-year span. The effect of H. pylori is stronger among those with a larger sibship size, who are expected to have been infected with H. pylori in childhood. Inducing atrophy of gastric mucosa, which is reflected by a decline of PG I/II, may be one of the mechanisms through which H. pylori elevates the risk of gastric cancer.
CITATION STYLE
Kikuchi, S., Kurosawa, M., Sakiyama, T., Tenjin, H., Miki, K., Wada, O., & Inaba, Y. (2000). Long-term effect of Helicobacter pylori infection on serum pepsinogens. Japanese Journal of Cancer Research, 91(5), 471–476. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.2000.tb00969.x
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