Mutations in Helicobacter pylori infected patients with chronic gastritis, intestinal type of gastric cancer and familial gastric cancer.
Andrzej HnatyszynMarlena SzalataAleksandra ZielińskaKarolina WielgusMikołaj DanielewskiPiotr Tomasz HnatyszynAndrzej PławskiJarosław WalkowiakRyszard SłomskiPublished in: Hereditary cancer in clinical practice (2024)
The lack of statistically significant changes of other interleukin genes involved in inflammatory processes may suggest the presence of H.pylori infection as a potential trigger for the development of the inflammatory process of the mucosa, leading through microbiota dysbiosis to the development of enteric gastric cancer. Mutations in analysed genes correlated with more severe mucosal changes, with a much more frequent presence of TP53 gene mutations, with a limited presence of other mutations in the familial history of gastric cancer.