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Title: Influence of gastritis on cyclooxygenase-2 expression before and after eradication of Helicobacter pylori infection. Author: Wambura C, Aoyama N, Shirasaka D, Kuroda K, Maekawa S, Ebara S, Watanabe Y, Tamura T, Kasuga M. Journal: Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol; 2004 Oct; 16(10):969-79. PubMed ID: 15371919. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Helicobacter pylori infection causes chronic gastritis and induces cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 expression. The relationship between gastritis and COX-2 expression is not well understood, especially long after the organism has been eradicated. We designed a study to elucidate this relationship. METHODS: Four endoscopic gastric biopsies from each of 118 H. pylori-infected subjects were assessed for COX-2 expression immunohistochemically, gastritis, by an updated Sydney System. In the 107 successfully eradicated subjects, the assessment was repeated once yearly, for 3 years. RESULTS: After successful eradication, COX-2 expression was reduced significantly regardless of site. Atrophy improved significantly and intestinal metaplasia improved but not in the antrum greater curvature. After 1 year COX-2 expression was not significantly different in the epithelia with and without intestinal metaplasia. Correlation between COX-2 expression and neutrophil score in the antrum (r = 0.214, P = 0.042) and inflammation in the corpus (r = 0.234, P = 0.025) disappeared after eradication. COX-2 expression correlated well with atrophy and metaplasia before and after eradication. No significant reduction in COX-2 or improvement in gastritis was found in subjects with eradication failure. CONCLUSION: H. pylori infection is associated with the enhancement of COX-2 expression in the gastric mucosa. Eradication therapy reduces COX-2 expression and hence may reduce the risk of cancer development.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]