Helicobacter pylori: gastric cancer and beyond

DB Polk, RM Peek Jr - Nature reviews cancer, 2010 - nature.com
DB Polk, RM Peek Jr
Nature reviews cancer, 2010nature.com
Helicobacter pylori is the dominant species of the human gastric microbiome, and
colonization causes a persistent inflammatory response. H. pylori-induced gastritis is the
strongest singular risk factor for cancers of the stomach; however, only a small proportion of
infected individuals develop malignancy. Carcinogenic risk is modified by strain-specific
bacterial components, host responses and/or specific host–microbe interactions. Delineation
of bacterial and host mediators that augment gastric cancer risk has profound ramifications …
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori is the dominant species of the human gastric microbiome, and colonization causes a persistent inflammatory response. H. pylori-induced gastritis is the strongest singular risk factor for cancers of the stomach; however, only a small proportion of infected individuals develop malignancy. Carcinogenic risk is modified by strain-specific bacterial components, host responses and/or specific host–microbe interactions. Delineation of bacterial and host mediators that augment gastric cancer risk has profound ramifications for both physicians and biomedical researchers as such findings will not only focus the prevention approaches that target H. pylori-infected human populations at increased risk for stomach cancer but will also provide mechanistic insights into inflammatory carcinomas that develop beyond the gastric niche.
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