OLGA Gastritis Staging for the Prediction of Gastric Cancer Risk: A Long-term Follow-up Study of 7436 Patients

Gastritis OLGA-staging ranks the risk for gastric cancer (GC) in progressive stages (0-IV). This long-term follow-up study quantifies the GC risk associated with each OLGA stage. Consecutive patients (7436) underwent esophagogastroscopy (T-0), with mapped gastric biopsies, OLGA staging, and H. pylor...

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Published in:The American journal of gastroenterology Vol. 113; no. 11; pp. 1621 - 1628
Main Authors: Rugge, Massimo, Genta, Robert M, Fassan, Matteo, Valentini, Elisa, Coati, Irene, Guzzinati, Stefano, Savarino, Edoardo, Zorzi, Manuel, Farinati, Fabio, Malfertheiner, Peter
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Wolters Kluwer Health Medical Research, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 01-11-2018
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Summary:Gastritis OLGA-staging ranks the risk for gastric cancer (GC) in progressive stages (0-IV). This long-term follow-up study quantifies the GC risk associated with each OLGA stage. Consecutive patients (7436) underwent esophagogastroscopy (T-0), with mapped gastric biopsies, OLGA staging, and H. pylori status assessment. Patients with neoplastic lesion (invasive or non-invasive) at the index endoscopy (and/or within 12 months) were excluded. All patients were followed-up (T-1) by combining different sources of clinical/pathological information (Regional Registries of: (i) esophagogastroduodenoscopies; (ii) pathology reports; (iii) cancer, (iv) mortality). The endpoint was histologically documented development of gastric epithelial neoplasia. At T-0, the patients' distribution by OLGA stage was: Stage 0 = 80.8%; Stage I = 12.6%; Stage II = 4.3%; Stage III = 2.0%; Stage IV = 0.3%; H. pylori infection was detected in 25.9% of patients. At the end of the follow-up (mean/median = 6.3/6.6 years), 28 incident neoplasia were documented (overall prevalence = 0.60 per 10 /person-years; low-grade intraepithelial neoplasia = 17/28; high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia = 4/28; GC = 7/28). By OLGA stage at the enrollment, the rate of incident neoplasia was: Stage 0 = 1 case; rate/10 person-years = 0.03; 95%CI: 0.004-0.19; Stage I = 2 cases; rate/10 person-years = 0.34; 95%CI: 0.09-1.36; Stage II = 3 cases; rate/10 person-years = 1.48; 95%CI: 0.48-4.58; Stage III = 17 cases; rate/10 person-years = 19.1; 95%CI: 11.9-30.7; Stage IV = 5 cases; rate/10 person-years = 41.2; 95%CI: 17.2-99.3. Multivariate analysis including gender, age, H. pylori status, and OLGA stage at enrollment only disclosed OLGA stage as predictor of neoplastic progression (OLGA stage III: HR = 712.4, 95%CI = 92.543-5484.5; OLGA stage IV: HR = 1450.7, 95%CI = 166.7-12626.0). Among 7436 patients, OLGA stages at the enrollment correlated significantly with different risk for gastric neoplasia. Based on the obtained results, gastritis staging is a critical adjunct in endoscopy follow-up protocols aimed at GC secondary prevention.
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ISSN:0002-9270
1572-0241
DOI:10.1038/s41395-018-0353-8