From the Journals

H. pylori eradication therapy curbs risk for stomach cancer


 

FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY

Strong data, jury out on universal screening

For additional comment, this news organization reached out to Aaron Glatt, MD, a spokesperson for the Infectious Diseases Society of America and chief of infectious diseases and hospital epidemiologist at Mount Sinai South Nassau in Oceanside, N.Y.

The study shows that the treatment of H. pylori “absolutely will decrease your risk of certain types of gastric carcinoma down the line. It does take a while to show that, 7 years, but this study shows that very clearly,” Dr. Glatt said.

“People who have definitely been shown to have H. pylori should be treated,” Dr. Glatt said.

“I don’t think this study yet supports that everybody should be screened, but it does make sense that people who have upper GI symptoms consistent with H. pylori should be checked for H. pylori and then appropriately treated, he noted.

Routine screening for H. pylori is recommended in countries with high incidence of gastric cancer, but not in the United States, Dr. Kim noted.

“Given the risk reduction of cancer with H. pylori treatment, consideration should be made in the U.S. for asymptomatic individuals with a family history of gastric cancer or immigrants from high-incidence countries,” she added.

The study was funded by the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Community Health Research Grants Program, the Permanente Medical Group Delivery Science & Applied Research Program, and the Permanente Medical Group. Dr. Li, Dr. Glatt, and Dr. Kim have declared no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Doxy PEP does not lower risk of STIs in cisgender women
MDedge Infectious Disease
Physicians and clinicians should be required to get flu shots: Ethicist
MDedge Infectious Disease
Toxic chemicals we consume without knowing it
MDedge Infectious Disease
‘Breakthrough’ study: Diabetes drug helps prevent long COVID
MDedge Infectious Disease
Can particles in dairy and beef cause cancer and MS?
MDedge Infectious Disease
NOVIDs: Do some have the genes to dodge COVID?
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID can mimic prostate cancer symptoms
MDedge Infectious Disease
Cancer, heart disease vaccines may be ready by 2030, Moderna says
MDedge Infectious Disease
FDA approves first RSV vaccine for older adults
MDedge Infectious Disease
New drugs in primary care: Lessons learned from COVID-19
MDedge Infectious Disease