The gastric precancerous cascade

P Correa, MB Piazuelo - Journal of digestive diseases, 2012 - Wiley Online Library
P Correa, MB Piazuelo
Journal of digestive diseases, 2012Wiley Online Library
Invasive gastric carcinoma is preceded by a cascade of precancerous lesions. The first
recognized histologic change is active chronic inflammation, which may persist as such: non‐
atrophic chronic gastritis (no gland loss), or advance to multifocal atrophic gastritis (MAG),
the first real step in the precancerous cascade. The following steps are: intestinal metaplasia
(first “complete” and then “incomplete”); dysplasia, first low grade and then high grade
(equivalent to “carcinoma in situ”). The following step is invasive carcinoma, which is thought …
Invasive gastric carcinoma is preceded by a cascade of precancerous lesions. The first recognized histologic change is active chronic inflammation, which may persist as such: non‐atrophic chronic gastritis (no gland loss), or advance to multifocal atrophic gastritis (MAG), the first real step in the precancerous cascade. The following steps are: intestinal metaplasia (first “complete” and then “incomplete”); dysplasia, first low grade and then high grade (equivalent to “carcinoma in situ”). The following step is invasive carcinoma, which is thought to be associated with degradation of the intercellular matrix.
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