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Helicobacter pylori infection is the major etiological factor of gastric carcinoma. This disease is the result of a long, multistep, and multifactorial process, which occurs only in a small proportion of patients infected with H. pylori. Gastric carcinoma development is influenced by host genetic susceptibility factors, environmental factors, and H. pylori virulence. H. pylori is genetically highly variable, and variability that affects H. pylori virulence factors may be useful to identify strains with different degrees of pathogenicity. This review will focus on VacA and CagA that have polymorphic regions that impact their functional properties. The characterization of H. pylori vacA and cagA-associated could be useful for identifying patients at highest risk of disease, who could be offered H. pylori eradication therapy and who could be included in programs of more intensive surveillance in an attempt to reduce gastric carcinoma incidence.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.bpg.2014.09.004

Type

Journal

Best practice & research. Clinical gastroenterology

Publication Date

12/2014

Volume

28

Pages

1003 - 1015

Addresses

Ipatimup - Institute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto, Portugal.

Keywords

Humans, Helicobacter pylori, Helicobacter Infections, Adenocarcinoma, Stomach Neoplasms, Bacterial Proteins, Antigens, Bacterial, Virulence, Genotype