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Serum pepsinogen and gastrin-17 as potential biomarkers for pre-malignant lesions in the gastric corpus.

Authors :
Loong TH
Soon NC
Nik Mahmud NRK
Naidu J
Rani RA
Abdul Hamid N
Elias MH
Mohamed Rose I
Tamil A
Mokhtar NM
Raja Ali RA
Source :
Biomedical reports [Biomed Rep] 2017 Nov; Vol. 7 (5), pp. 460-468. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Sep 20.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

There is a lack of non-invasive screening modalities to diagnose chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) and intestinal metaplasia (IM). Thus, the aim of the present study was to determine the sensitivity and specificity of serum pepsinogen I (PGI), PGI:II, the PGI:II ratio and gastrin-17 (G-17) in diagnosing CAG and IM, and the correlations between these serum biomarkers and pre-malignant gastric lesions. A cross-sectional study of 72 patients (82% of the calculated sample size) who underwent oesophageal-gastro-duodenoscopy for dyspepsia was performed in the present study. The mean age of the participants was 56.2±16.2 years. Serum PGI:I, PGI:II, G-17 and Helicobacter pylori antibody levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Median levels of PGI:I, PGI:II, the PGI:II ratio and G-17 for were 129.9 µg/l, 10.3 µg/l, 14.7 and 4.4 pmol/l, respectively. Subjects with corpus CAG/IM exhibited a significantly lower PGI:II ratio (7.2) compared with the control group (15.7; P<0.001). Histological CAG and IM correlated well with the serum PGI:II ratio (r=-0.417; P<0.001). The cut-off value of the PGI:II ratio of ≤10.0 demonstrated high sensitivity (83.3%), specificity (77.9%) and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.902 in detecting the two conditions. However, the sensitivity was particularly low at a ratio of ≤3.0. The serum PGI:II ratio is a sensitive and specific marker to diagnose corpus CAG/IM, but at a high cut-off value. This ratio may potentially be used as an outpatient, non-invasive biomarker for detecting corpus CAG/IM.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2049-9434
Volume :
7
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biomedical reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29181158
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3892/br.2017.985