|
Stomach Cancer Research Program
Stomach cancer remains the second leading cause of cancer death worldwide.
The highest rates of stomach cancer are found
in Japan and Chile, and one of the lowest rates is in the United States.
However, stomach cancer appears more
frequently in Japanese Americans than in European Americans.
New cases of stomach cancer are found in
28/100,000 persons among Japanese Americans.
In 1996, DPC launched a stomach cancer study in collaboration with Professor
Kazumasa Miki of Toho University and Professors Michael Kimmey and Thomas
Fritsche of the University of Washington.
The study participants were about 800 Japanese American adults in the
Seattle area. The purpose of the study is to identify risk factors associated
with chronic atrophic gastritis, a condition considered to somewhat increase the
likelihood of developing stomach cancer.
To screen persons with chronic atrophic gastritis, Prof. Miki measured blood
levels of pepsinogens (an enzyme of precursor of pepsin); low levels are
associated with chronic atrophic gastritis.
Test kits for pepsinogen are commercially available in Japan but not in
the United States. Age-specific
prevalence rates for chronic atrophic gastritis are consistently lower for
Japanese Americans than for native Japanese, implying that environmental
factors play a significant role in stomach cancer. <see the chart below>.
Chart13.
Prevalence of
chronic atrophic gastritis among native Japanese and Japanese
Americans. Data were based
on 840 Japanese in Seattle and 25,415 native Japanese in Japan who participated
in health screenings.
Stomach cancer is associated with dietary factors such as a high intake
of salt and pickled or smoked foods, and a low intake of fresh fruits and
vegetables. More recently, researchers
have examined the role of Helicobacter
pylori, which lives in the stomach for decades and probably causes peptic
ulcer and chronic atrophic gastritis.
Our preliminary findings show that prevalence rates of
H. pylori and chronic atrophic gastritis
increase with age, and that living in Japan for more than 20 years and having
H. pylori infection synergistically
increase the risk for chronic atrophic gastritis.
All participants with abnormally low
pepsinogen levels have been offered an endoscopic examination at the University
of Washington Medical Center. This
examination can detect some cancers at early stage and thereby the tumor can be
removed.
Publications and Presentations
Namekata T, Miki K, Kimmey M, Fritsche T, Hughes D,
Moore D, Suzuki K. Chronic atrophic gastritis and Helicobacter pylori
infection among Japanese Americans in Seattle. American Journal of
Epidemiology 2000; 151:820-30.
|
@ |