Helicobacter pylori and gastric malignancies

Standard

Helicobacter pylori and gastric malignancies. / Nardone, Gerardo; Morgner, Andrea.

in: HELICOBACTER, Jahrgang 8 Suppl 1, 2003, S. 44-52.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Nardone, G & Morgner, A 2003, 'Helicobacter pylori and gastric malignancies', HELICOBACTER, Jg. 8 Suppl 1, S. 44-52.

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{c1969ff4bcb7443eb99ec3e6ce7ced92,
title = "Helicobacter pylori and gastric malignancies",
abstract = "Despite decreasing incidence during the last 50 years, gastric cancer still ranks as one of the most frequent cancers. A multifactorial model of human gastric carcinogenesis is currently accepted in which different dietary and nondietary factors, including genetic susceptibility of the host and Helicobacter pylori infection are involved at different stages in the cancer process. On the molecular level, at least two phenotypes, associated with distinct pathways of genome destabilization, have been identified. However, applying new technologies such as cDNA microarrays a new era in the analysis of molecular markers has started. This molecular technology may open the path towards novel treatment modalities, i.e. gene therapy. Epidemiological, biological, and molecular genetic studies have also implicated the role of H. pylori in lymphomagenesis. Knowledge of pathogenesis and therapy is increasing while good epidemiological data are rare. Many studies have demonstrated that MALT-type lymphomas develop along two different pathways: t(11;18)-positive cases, and t(11;18)-negative cases. Meanwhile, a third translocation could be detected, the t(14;18), opening the discussion of a possible third pathway of lymphoma development.",
keywords = "Helicobacter Infections, Helicobacter pylori, Humans, Incidence, Risk Factors, Stomach Neoplasms, Journal Article, Review",
author = "Gerardo Nardone and Andrea Morgner",
year = "2003",
language = "English",
volume = "8 Suppl 1",
pages = "44--52",
journal = "HELICOBACTER",
issn = "1083-4389",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Helicobacter pylori and gastric malignancies

AU - Nardone, Gerardo

AU - Morgner, Andrea

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Despite decreasing incidence during the last 50 years, gastric cancer still ranks as one of the most frequent cancers. A multifactorial model of human gastric carcinogenesis is currently accepted in which different dietary and nondietary factors, including genetic susceptibility of the host and Helicobacter pylori infection are involved at different stages in the cancer process. On the molecular level, at least two phenotypes, associated with distinct pathways of genome destabilization, have been identified. However, applying new technologies such as cDNA microarrays a new era in the analysis of molecular markers has started. This molecular technology may open the path towards novel treatment modalities, i.e. gene therapy. Epidemiological, biological, and molecular genetic studies have also implicated the role of H. pylori in lymphomagenesis. Knowledge of pathogenesis and therapy is increasing while good epidemiological data are rare. Many studies have demonstrated that MALT-type lymphomas develop along two different pathways: t(11;18)-positive cases, and t(11;18)-negative cases. Meanwhile, a third translocation could be detected, the t(14;18), opening the discussion of a possible third pathway of lymphoma development.

AB - Despite decreasing incidence during the last 50 years, gastric cancer still ranks as one of the most frequent cancers. A multifactorial model of human gastric carcinogenesis is currently accepted in which different dietary and nondietary factors, including genetic susceptibility of the host and Helicobacter pylori infection are involved at different stages in the cancer process. On the molecular level, at least two phenotypes, associated with distinct pathways of genome destabilization, have been identified. However, applying new technologies such as cDNA microarrays a new era in the analysis of molecular markers has started. This molecular technology may open the path towards novel treatment modalities, i.e. gene therapy. Epidemiological, biological, and molecular genetic studies have also implicated the role of H. pylori in lymphomagenesis. Knowledge of pathogenesis and therapy is increasing while good epidemiological data are rare. Many studies have demonstrated that MALT-type lymphomas develop along two different pathways: t(11;18)-positive cases, and t(11;18)-negative cases. Meanwhile, a third translocation could be detected, the t(14;18), opening the discussion of a possible third pathway of lymphoma development.

KW - Helicobacter Infections

KW - Helicobacter pylori

KW - Humans

KW - Incidence

KW - Risk Factors

KW - Stomach Neoplasms

KW - Journal Article

KW - Review

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 14617217

VL - 8 Suppl 1

SP - 44

EP - 52

JO - HELICOBACTER

JF - HELICOBACTER

SN - 1083-4389

ER -