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Title: Mutagens, N-nitroso compounds and their precursors in gastric juice from patients with and without precancerous lesions of the stomach. Author: Pignatelli B, Malaveille C, Rogatko A, Hautefeuille A, Thuillier P, Muñoz N, Moulinier B, Berger F, De Montclos H, Lambert R. Journal: Eur J Cancer; 1993; 29A(14):2031-9. PubMed ID: 8280498. Abstract: This study examined whether elevated risk of gastric cancer is associated with high levels of total N-nitroso compounds (NOC), their precursors and nitrosation-dependent genotoxins in gastric juice (GJ). An improved method for quantifying total NOC was used and genotoxicity was assayed in E. coli. Results from patients (n = 210) with or without precancerous lesions of the stomach and living in three areas with up to 8-fold variations in gastric cancer risk (U.K., France, Colombia) were compared. The level of nitrite (range < 1-472 mumol/l) was found to increase with the pH of GJ from the three countries and was dependent on country of collection. The levels of NOC (range: < or = 0.01-8.0 mumol/l) in GJ were not affected by stomach histology and country of collection. NOC levels increased linearly with nitrite concentrations, but the slope of the regression line was greater for acidic GJ (pH < or = 4). These data together suggest that chemical nitrosation contributes at least as much as other nitrosation pathways to the intragastric formation of NOC. Acid-catalysed nitrosation of GJ in vitro increased the NOC concentration (range: 7-1332 mumol/l) up to several 1000-fold but this increase was not predictive of gastric cancer risk either by country or by stomach histology. After acid-catalysed nitrosation, direct genotoxicity (SOS-inducing potency) was significantly higher in GJ with original pH > 4 and highest in samples from Colombia. The results (a) provide no support that intragastric total NOC levels are elevated in subjects with precancerous stomach lesions or living in a high risk area for stomach cancer; (b) confirm that a high nitrite level and elevated pH in GJ are strongly associated, the level of nitrite being associated with precancerous stomach conditions only in Colombia; (c) reveal the presence of precursor compounds in GJ, that after nitrosation yield direct mutagens that probably contain NOC and other substances. As their concentrations were significantly higher in achlorhydric subjects and highest in Colombian patients, these data together provide support for a role of intragastrically formed nitrite-derived direct mutagens in gastric cancer aetiology.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]