Wang RT, Wang T, Chen K, Wang JY, Zhang JP, Lin SR, Zhu YM, Zhang WM, Cao YX, Zhu CW, Yu H, Cong YJ, Zheng S, Wu BQ. Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric cancer: evidence from a retrospective cohort study and nested case-control study in China. World J Gastroenterol 2002; 8(6): 1103-1107 [PMID: 12439934 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v8.i6.1103]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Run-Tian Wang, Prof., Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing, 100083, China. twang@bjmu.edu.cn
Article-Type of This Article
H.Pylori
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Wen-Ming Zhang, The First People’s Hospital of Changzhou, Changzhou 213003, Jiangsu Province, China
Yu-Xin Cao, The First People’s Hospital of Muping, Yantai 264100, Shandong Province, China
Yu-Jun Cong, The Third People’s Hospital of Muping, Yantai 264107, Shandong Province, China
ORCID number: $[AuthorORCIDs]
Author contributions: All authors contributed equally to the work.
Supported by Chinese Medical Board of New York,Inc.,No.96-628
Correspondence to: Run-Tian Wang, Prof., Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing, 100083, China. twang@bjmu.edu.cn
Telephone: +86-10-62091525 Fax: +86-10-62015583
Received: April 29, 2002 Revised: June 4, 2002 Accepted: June 12, 2002 Published online: December 15, 2002
Abstract
AIM: To explore the association between Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection and risk of gastric cancer in China.
METHODS: Utilizing gastroendoscopic biospsy tissue banks accumulated from1980 to1988 in Shandong, Zhejiang, and Jiangsu, where stomach cancer incidence was high, during stomach cancer screening conducted by Health Science Center of Peking University, School of Medicine of Zhejiang University, and Zhongshan Hospital of Fudan University. Warthin Starry silver staining method was applied to determine H. pylori infection status of biopsies collected during gastroendoscopic examination. In the retrospective study, the subjects were divided into two cohorts, the exposure cohort was positive H. pylori infection, and the non-exposure cohort was negative. Death from stomach cancer was determined as the outcome of the study. Logistic regression and Cox regression were applied to analyze the association between Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric cancer risk. In the nested case-control study, there were 28 deaths from gastric cancer in the fields of Muping, Shandong province, and Zhoushan, Zhejiang provinces. 4 controls were matched to each case on the basis of age ( ± 5 years old), sex, residential place at the same time entered into the study. Conditional logistic regression analysis was used to analyze the data.
RESULTS: There were a total of 2719 subjects (male 1399, female 1320) with gastroendoscopic biopsies stored available treated as a cohort. H. pylori positive cohort included 1671 subjects (61.5%) and H. pylori negative cohort 1048 subjects(38.5%). These subjects were followed up for 1-19 years, averaged 10.88 years. The outcome of death from stomach cancer in the exposure cohort was 33, and in the non-exposure cohort 11. After adjustment for age and sex, RR = 1.9850 (P = 0.0491), 95%CI was 1.0026, and 3.9301. The results of conditional logistic regression showed an OR of 4.467 and 95%CI of 1.161, and 17.190 for the nested case control study.
CONCLUSION: The results from the retrospective cohort study and the nested-case control study on the association of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer in China suggested that Helicobacter pylori infection might increase the risk of stomach cancer.
Key Words: $[Keywords]
Citation: Wang RT, Wang T, Chen K, Wang JY, Zhang JP, Lin SR, Zhu YM, Zhang WM, Cao YX, Zhu CW, Yu H, Cong YJ, Zheng S, Wu BQ. Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric cancer: evidence from a retrospective cohort study and nested case-control study in China. World J Gastroenterol 2002; 8(6): 1103-1107
Large volume of literature on the association of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer has been published since Warren and Marshall first isolated Helicobacter pylori from human gastric mucosa in 1983[1]. The first compelling evidence linking H. pylori infection to gastric cancer was obtained from seroepidemiologic studies using nested case-control study design in the United States and Britain[2-4]. Although there were discrepancy among epidemiological studies[5-22], some meta-analyses indicated the magnitude of the association H. pylori infection and risk of gastric cancer was ORs = 2-6[23-27]. Most of the studies based on serological data; the status of whether the H. pylori harbored in gastric mucosa at the time of sample collection was uncertain and it only indicated past infection of H. pylori. Using the H. pylori detected by microscopy from biopsy had some limitations because only several specimens were taken during endoscopy underwent, which might lead to underestimation. However, the bacilli found under microscope might reveal actual status of H. pylori harbored in the gastric mucosa. Under the support of foundation of Chinese Medical Board of New York Inc., Health Science Center of Peking University, Medical School of Zhejiang University and Zhongshan Hospital of Fudan University cooperated in the study of the association of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer. The subjects of H. pylori infection was positive when there were bacilli found under the microscope, the outcome of the study was gastric cancer death. A nested case-control design was carried out using gastric cancer death from Muping, Shandong province and Zhoushan, Zhejiang province where most of the subjects resided in the rural areas.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Field of investigation
The field of Health Science Center of Peking University is Gaoling town in Muping County of Yantai City of Shandong province (short for Muping below), the mortality rate of gastric cancer was averaging 40/100000 population during the last two decades. Screening and early diagnosis program were undertaken for those over 35 years old in 1987 and 1988. 2200 subjects’ biopsies were taken and underwent histopathological diagnosis The field of School of Medicine of Zhejiang University is Daishan county in Zhoushan archipelago of Zhejiang Province (short for Zhoushan below), the mortality rate of gastric cancer was about 50/100000 population, gastric cancer screening had been conducted and gastroendoscopy and histological diagnosis had been done on about 1800 subjects from 1980 to 1983. The field of Zhongshan Hospital of Fudan University is Changzhou city in Jiangsu province (short for Changzhou below), the mortality rate of gastric cancer was about 40/100000 population, gastroendoscopy had been carried out in 1500 subjects.
Pathological and laboratory examination criteria
The histologic sections stained by H&E was according to the National Gastric Cancer Prevention Study Pathological Diagnostic Criteria, and gastric cancer was confirmed by pathological diagnosis. The H. pylori infection was determined by histologic assessment. Warthin Starry silver staining was applied to the histologic section of endoscopic biopsies and to determine the status of H. pylori infection of the subjects. The diagnostic criteria followed the Criteria for diagnosis on histologic sections on the first meeting of experts when an agreement was reached in April 1999[28].
Subjects of retrospective cohort study
Biopsies were available for histologic sections and Warrthin Starry silver staining from Muping, Zhoushan and Changzhou comprised the cohort. There were 1055, 875 and 793 subjects’ biopsies available, respectively. The pathologic diagnosis was retrieved according to the record of diagnosis, and gastric cancer patients were excluded either for those diagnosed at the time of screening or diagnosed within one year after screening program. The histologic assessment of H. pylori infection was conducted by pathologists well trained on diagnosing H. pylori infection with Warrthin Starry silver staining slides. The exposure cohort was H. pylori infection positive after the histologic section assessment, and the non-exposure cohort was negative.
Subjects of nested case-control study
The cases were those who died from gastric cancer during the following period after the screening program and met the criteria set forth above in Muping and Zhoushan. For each case of gastric cancer death, we matched 4 controls on the basis of age (not ± 5 years), sex, date of biopsy specimen sampling and residential place, who were gastric cancer-free at the end of 1999.
Questionnaire survey
All subjects whose biopsies for histologic assessment were given a questionnaire interview, which included demographic data, family history of gastric cancer, life style such as smoking habit etc., and diagnosis and treatment of H. pylori infection in the past. The interviewers were village doctors trained on the interviewing skills. The interviews started from 1998 to the end of 1999. The subjects died and those who could not answer the questions while interviewing, was helped by their relatives familiar with them.
Statistical analysis
A database was established by the EPI info package, was put in according to standard procedure after the questionnaires evaluation and met the requirements. The SPSS package was used to conduct logistic regression analysis of the cohort and the Egret package (A Commercial System for Advanced Epidemiologic Statistics 1999) was applied to conduct Cox regression analysis of the survival data of the cohort, conditional logistic regression was used to compute the asymptotic ORs for the nested case control data.
RESULTS
General information of the cohort
The total subjects of the cohort were 2719. There were 1 055 subjects from Muping, 875 subjects from Zhoushan and 793 subjects form Changzhou.
1399 (51.5%) subjects were male, and 1320 (48.5%) female. 1671 (61.5%) subjects were H. pylori positive; 1048 (38.5%) were H. pylori negative. Table 1 listed the general information of the three cohorts.
Table 1 The general information of the H. pylori positive and H. pylori negative cohorts.
H. pylori positive cohort
H. pylori negative cohort
Total
P
Gender(male/female)
1671(881/790)*
1048(520/528)
2719(1399/1320)
>0.05
Muping
675(424/251)
380(239/141)
= 1.000
Zhoushan
501(285/216)
370(183/187)
= 0.033*
Changzhou
495(172/323)
298(98/200)
= 0.643
Age ( < 50, 50-60, ≥ 60)
1671(604,505,562)
1048(366,310,372)
2719(970,815,934)
>0.05
Muping
675(216,189,270)
380(102,110,168)
0.082,0.096
Zhoushan
501(221,138,142)
370(142,109,119)
0.097,0.224
Changzhou
495(167,178,150)
298(112,91,85)
0.108,0.131
Economic Status(well,poor)
1612(1513,99)
1007(949,58)
2619(2462,157)
>0.05(0.719-0.734)
Smoking(yes, no)
1610(877,733)
1006(566,450)
2616(1433,1183)
>0.05(0.123-1.0)
Alcohol drinking(yes, no)
1610(624,986)
1006(384,622)
2616(1008,1608)
>0.05(0.07-0.814)
Family history of gastric cancer(yes, no)
1670(167,1503)
1046(98,948)
2716(265,2451)
>0.05(0.277-0.948)
Average follow-up duration of the subjects (Table 2)
There were 2719 subjects’ biopsies available for histologic assessment of H. pylori infection in the three fields where the prevalence rate of gastric cancer was high in China and were followed up to observe the outcome. The average follow-up duration was 10.88 years.
Number of gastric cancer deaths observed in cohort
The number of gastric cancer deaths observed in each field in H. pylori positive and H. pylori negative cohorts was listed in Table 3.
Table 3 The distribution of gastric cancer deaths observed in the follow-up period of the cohorts.
Field
H. pylori positive cohort
H. pylori positive cohort
Total
n
No. of gastric cancer death
n
No. of gastric cancer death
n
No. of gastric cancer death
Muping
675
9
380
3
1055
12
Zhoushan
501
10
370
6
871
16
Changzhou
495
14
298
2
793
16
Total
1671
33
1048
11
2719
44
The results of cohort study
The average age of gastric cancer death cases of the H. pylori positive and H. pylori negative cohorts was 60.41 and 69.18, respectively. The t test showed that there was significant difference between the two cohorts (t = 2.494, P = 0.017). The results of logistic regression analysis of association of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer death of different age groups were shown in Table 4. The results of Cox regression analysis was shown in Table 5.
Table 4 Result of logistic regression analysis of different age groups.
Variables
OR
95%CI
< 50 years old
4.601
1.885,11.229
50-60 years old
1.916
0.961,3.822
≥ 60 years old
Do not convergence
Table 5 The results of Cox regression analysis with adjustment of age and sex.
Variable
β
S.E
Wald
df
P
RR
95%CI
lower
upper
H. pylori
0.6856
0.3485
3.8705
1
0.0491
1.9850
1.0026
3.9301
Age
0.9062
0.5005
3.2773
1
0.0702
2.4748
0.9278
6.6010
Sex
-0.3237
0.3203
1.0215
1
0.3122
0.7234
0.3861
1.3554
The RR = 1.9850, P = 0.0491, 95%CI is 1.0026 to 3.9301 for exposure of H. pylori infection cohort to non-exposure cohort with adjustment of age and sex.
The cumulative hazard function for positive and negative H. pylori infection and gastric cancer death adjusted age and sex was shown in Figure 1: a higher hazard for subjects with positive H. pylori infection, the difference was statistically different.
Figure 1 Cumulative hazard funtion for subjects with positive and negative H.
pylori infection
The results of nested case-control study
The total number of gastric cancer death within the cohort of Muping and Zhoushan was 28, and 21 were male, 7 female. The average age of the subjects of cases and controls was 65.89 and 65.21, and the statistical analysis showed no difference between the two cohorts.
After univariate analysis, the result of multivariate analysis with adjustment of potential confounding factors was shown in Table 6.
Table 6 The result of conditional logistic analysis of H. pylori and gastric cancer risk.
β
P
OR
95%CI (lower)
95%CI(upper)
H. pylori infection
1.497
0.0295
4.467
1.1610
17.1900
Non-farmer
-1.415
0.0669
0.243
0.0535
1.1040
Poor economic condition
1.287
0.2022
3.620
0.5011
26.1600
Usually drank unboiled water
1.099
0.1565
3.000
0.6564
13.710
Wash hands before meals
-1.896
0.0241
0.150
0.0289
0.7798
Like to eat smoked food
0.913
0.2102
2.492
0.5974
10.3900
Lower vegetables intake
0.5153
0.4542
1.674
0.4342
6.4550
Smoking
5.808
0.0037
332.800
6.5840
1.683e + 004
Older age started to smoke
-0.145
0.0137
0.865
0.7707
0.9707
Lower fruits intake
-0.524
0.4836
0.592
0.1367
2.5660
History of upper addominal pain
0.678
0.3027
1.970
0.5425
7.1530
After adjusted some potential confounding factors, it showed that H. pylori infection was significantly associated with gastric cancer death, the OR was 4.467, 95%CI was 161-17.19, P < 0.05.
DISCUSSION
The aim of this study was to explore the association between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer risk. The average follow up duration was 10.8 years. The results of retrospective analysis showed that the risk of death from gastric cancer in the H. pylori positive cohort was 1.985 times to H. pylori negative cohort (95%CI (1.0026, 3.9301)); the results of the nested case-control showed the association between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer risk increased after adjustment of some potential confounding factor, the OR was 4.467, 95%CI was 1.161 to 17.190. The result suggested that the H. pylori infection was associated with gastric cancer death. The results were in accordance with those retrospective and nested case control studies[2-4,10,12,14,18,19,21,22] and meta-analyses of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer risk published recently[23-27]. It was also similar to the magnitude of association between H. pylori infection and non-cardia gastric cancer 2.29 in Linxian of China reported by Limburg et al[29] in a nested case control study and the results of Hansen et al[14]. The average age of gastric death in the H. pylori infection cohort was younger than that of negative cohort, the difference was statistically significant, the ORs of different age groups were in favor of that H. pylori infection was risk factor for the young[10,30,31]. Because the carcinogenesis of gastric cancer was of multiple stages and multiple factors involvement, H. pylori infection is not an independent risk factors on the carcinogenesis of gastric cancer. The prevalence of H. pylori infection is high in developing counties, only a small proportion of people infected with the bacteria develop gastric cancer. The biological mechanism of gastric carcinogenesis remains unclear. Our results suggested that H. pylori infection played different role at different ages of life.
The gastric cancer death in this study was those histologically confirmed cases and excluding those followed after gastroendoscopic screening within one year in each field and cardia gastric cancer, all these limitations might strengthen the virtual epidemiological evidence generated by this study.
There are several methods to determine the H. pylori infection of the stomach; the sensitivity and specificity are approximate[32-34]. The application of these methods would render different results’ false negative results in different population[7,13,33,34], and the use of multiple tests may help to provide a more accurate diagnosis of H. pylori infection[35]. Although the seroconversion rate was a bit lower[36,37, 38]. The loss of H. pylori infection may occur earlier in those using serological assessment of H. pylori infection than using histological assessment of H. pylori infection, because sera H. pylori IgG can be detected after the eradication of H. pylori. Histologic assessment of biopsies was more reliable and with less information bias. The data of this study was a combined analysis in high gastric cancer prevalence areas in China. The recent mortality rate of gastric cancer was about 40-50/100000 persons by screening and early diagnostic program carried out in the three regions and the biopsies reserved made such a study feasible. Although the subjects screened could not represent the natural population and some biopsies used by other studies, there might be selection bias, which could result some bias in the estimation the association between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer risk. Since strict quality control and the confounding factors controlled during the analysis were conducted, the chance of misclassification of diagnosis and exposure was minimized, and the overall result was reliable.
Although we had provided evidence for positive association between H. pylori infection and gastric cancer risk based on histologic assessment of H. pylori infection by limited cohort subjects, it needs to expand the study in a natural population to minimize the selection bias. The association between H. pylori Cag A positive strain, which is considered more virulent than others, and gastric cancer should be further investigated. More convincing evidence of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer risk would be gained by H. pylori eradication interventional study.
Warren JR, Marshall BJ. Unidentified curved bacilli on gastric epithelium in active chronic gastritis.Lancet. 1983;1:1273-1275.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Muszyński J, Dzierzanowska D, Siemińska J, Bogdańska M, Vogt E, Ehrmann A. Is Helicobacter pylori infection a real risk factor for gastric carcinoma.Scand J Gastroenterol. 1995;30:647-651.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Azuma T, Ito S, Sato F, Yamazaki Y, Miyaji H, Ito Y, Suto H, Kuriyama M, Kato T, Kohli Y. The role of the HLA-DQA1 gene in resistance to atrophic gastritis and gastric adenocarcinoma induced by Helicobacter pylori infection.Cancer. 1998;82:1013-1018.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ][Cited by in F6Publishing: 7][Reference Citation Analysis (0)]
Yuan JM, Yu MC, Xu WW, Cockburn M, Gao YT, Ross RK. Helicobacter pylori infection and risk of gastric cancer in Shanghai, China: updated results based upon a locally developed and validated assay and further follow-up of the cohort.Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1999;8:621-624.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Enroth H, Kraaz W, Engstrand L, Nyrén O, Rohan T. Helicobacter pylori strain types and risk of gastric cancer: a case-control study.Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2000;9:981-985.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Plummer M, Vivas J, Fauchère JL, Del Giudice G, Peña AS, Ponzetto A, Lopez G, Miki K, Oliver W, Muñoz N. Helicobacter pylori and stomach cancer: a case-control study in Venezuela.Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2000;9:961-965.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Yamagata H, Kiyohara Y, Aoyagi K, Kato I, Iwamoto H, Nakayama K, Shimizu H, Tanizaki Y, Arima H, Shinohara N. Impact of Helicobacter pylori infection on gastric cancer incidence in a general Japanese population: the Hisayama study.Arch Intern Med. 2000;160:1962-1968.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ][Cited by in Crossref: 73][Cited by in F6Publishing: 78][Article Influence: 3.3][Reference Citation Analysis (0)]
Wang T, Chen K, Wang , RT , Zhu YM, Cong YJ, Zhou YN, Zhang JP, Yu H, Cao YX. Nested case-control study on the relationship of Hp infection and gastric cancer risk.Zhongguo Yufang Yixue Zazhi. 2001;2:27-29.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Jiang YW, Wang RT, Wang T, Zhang JP, Lei DN. Multi-groups controlled study on the association of Helicobacter pylori infec-tion with gastric cancer and stomach diseases.Beijing Daxue Xuebao(Yixue Ban). 2001;33:160-163.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Wang RT, Wang T, Chen K, Wang JY, Zhang JP, Lin SR, Zhu YM, Zhang WM, Cao YX, Zhu CW. Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric cancer: evidence from a retrospective cohort study and nested case-control study in China.World J Gastroenterol. 2002;8:1103-1107.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Xue FB, Xu YY, Wan Y, Pan BR, Ren J, Fan DM. Association of H. pylori infection with gastric carcinoma: a Meta analysis.World J Gastroenterol. 2001;7:801-804.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
National H. pylori Research Group. Agreement and comments on some H. pylori issues.Chinese Medical Journal. 2000;80:394-395.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Imrie C, Rowland M, Bourke B, Drumm B. Is Helicobacter pylori infection in childhood a risk factor for gastric cancer.Pediatrics. 2001;107:373-380.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ]
Tabata H, Fuchigami T, Kobayashi H, Sakai Y, Nakanishi M, Tomioka K, Nakamura S, Fujishima M. Helicobacter pylori and mucosal atrophy in patients with gastric cancer: a special study regarding the methods for detecting Helicobacter pylori.Dig Dis Sci. 1999;44:2027-2034.
[PubMed] [DOI][Cited in This Article: ][Cited by in Crossref: 18][Cited by in F6Publishing: 21][Article Influence: 0.8][Reference Citation Analysis (0)]