Published online Apr 7, 2024. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v30.i13.1851
Peer-review started: December 30, 2023
First decision: January 16, 2024
Revised: January 19, 2024
Accepted: March 18, 2024
Article in press: March 18, 2024
Published online: April 7, 2024
Processing time: 94 Days and 14.4 Hours
Currently, the diagnostic strategy for chronic gastritis (CG) is aimed not just at fixing the presence of gastric mucosal inflammation, but also at gastric cancer (GC) risk stratification in a particular patient. Modern classification approach with the definition of the stage of gastritis determines the need, activities and frequency of dynamic monitoring of a patient. However, this attitude to the patient suffering from CG was far from always. The present publication is a literature review describing the key milestones in the history of CG research, from the description of the first observations of inflammation of the gastric mucosa, assessment of gastritis as a predominantly functional disease, to the advent of endoscopy of the upper digestive tract and diagnostic gastric biopsy, assessment of the role of Helicobacter pylori infection in progression of inflammatory changes to atrophy, intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia and GC.
Core Tip: For more than a century, physicians have noted the relationship of chronic gastritis (CG) with the development of gastric cancer, which prompted great interest in the study and systematization of CG in order to better understand the prognosis and develop approaches for cancer prevention. The accumulated knowledge about the etiology, pathogenesis and morphology of gastritis has made it possible to coordinate the general ideas about gastritis in the classifications used by practicing physicians today.
