2010
DOI: 10.1128/jcm.01501-09
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Epidemiological Link between Gastric Disease and Polymorphisms in VacA and CagA

Abstract: Gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, and gastric cancer are a few of the diverse disease manifestations that have been shown to be associated with infection by Helicobacter pylori. Why some individuals develop more severe forms of disease remains largely unknown. In this study, 225 South Korean strains were genotyped for vacA and then analyzed to determine if particular genotypes varied across disease state, sex, or cagA allele. Of these strains, 206 strains carried an s1/i1/m1 allele, 11 strains carried an s1/i1/… Show more

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Cited by 71 publications
(89 citation statements)
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“…Our studies showed that there is a significant association between infection with H. pylori strains carrying the EPIYA-ABD cagA genotype and the development of gastric cancer (11). Moreover, the majority of H. pylori isolates encoded the most virulent CagA (EPIYA-ABD) and VacA (s1/i1/m1) proteins (9,11). The polymorphisms in cagA and vacA, alone and in concert, impact the progression to severe gastric disease, but the impact of these two virulence factors alone is not sufficient to explain the vast discrepancy in gastric cancer rates between East Asian and Western populations.…”
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confidence: 70%
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“…Our studies showed that there is a significant association between infection with H. pylori strains carrying the EPIYA-ABD cagA genotype and the development of gastric cancer (11). Moreover, the majority of H. pylori isolates encoded the most virulent CagA (EPIYA-ABD) and VacA (s1/i1/m1) proteins (9,11). The polymorphisms in cagA and vacA, alone and in concert, impact the progression to severe gastric disease, but the impact of these two virulence factors alone is not sufficient to explain the vast discrepancy in gastric cancer rates between East Asian and Western populations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Clearly, gastric diseases are due, at least in part, to infection by H. pylori, and the ultimate disease developed appears to be affected by variability in H. pylori virulence factors. Recently, we presented detailed epidemiological studies of cagA and vacA from a collection of 260 isolates from South Korea (9,10,11). Our studies showed that there is a significant association between infection with H. pylori strains carrying the EPIYA-ABD cagA genotype and the development of gastric cancer (11).…”
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confidence: 88%
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“…In our study, conversion of the vacA alleles, cagA + : cagA -, and iceA1/A2 + : iceA1/2 -was suggested to have occurred in some patients. These virulence factors are presently considered the main proteins involved in pathogenesis of H. pylori and their diversity has been associated with different disease outcomes (29)(30)(31)(32). Results of our study demonstrated the presence of great diversity among the isolates based on genotyping (30.76z); our result was higher than that seen in other reports (21).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 48%
“…In East Asian countries such as China, Japan, and Korea, the prevalence of H. pylori infection is 60% -88%, and H. pylori-associated gastric cancers occur more frequently than in Western countries [4][5][6]. Many epidemiological studies have suggested that progression from H. pylori infection to adverse effects is controlled by combinations of genetic variants in the host, environmental factors, and H. pylori gene polymorphisms [7][8][9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%