Helicobacter pylori infection is a major risk factor for gastric cancer development. Therefore, H. pylori eradication may be an important approach in the prevention of gastric cancer. However, long-term data proving the efficacy of this approach are lacking. This report describes two patients who developed gastric cancer at, respectively, 4 and 14 years after H. pylori eradication therapy. These patients were included in a study cohort of H. pylori-infected subjects who received anti-H. pylori therapy during the early years of development of H. pylori eradication therapy and underwent strict endoscopic follow-up for several years. In both patients, gastric ulcer disease and premalignant gastric lesions, i.e., intestinal metaplasia at baseline and dysplasia during follow-up, were diagnosed before gastric cancer development. These case reports demonstrate that H. pylori eradication does not prevent gastric cancer development in all infected patients after long-term follow-up. In patients with premalignant gastric lesions, in particular in patients with a history of gastric ulcer disease, adequate endoscopic follow-up is essential for early detection of gastric neoplasia.
Teófilo Asunción Medina LeónNidia Adela Vera IbarrolaNidia Adela Vera IbarrolaUniversidad San Ignacio de Loyola, Paraguay
Rodríguez Mora, Jefferson FabiánMorales López, Johana ElizabethSantamaría Velásquez, Paola VanessaVeas Aguirre, Shirley JamilethGuajala Ordóñez, Mercedes CecibelPiedra Benitez, Julia Elizabeth