Clinical Application of Serum Pepsinogen I and II Levels for Mass Screening to Detect Gastric Cancer
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Japanese Journal of Cancer Research
- Vol. 84 (10) , 1086-1090
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1993.tb02805.x
Abstract
A considerable number of gastric cancers derive from stomach mucosa where chronic atrophic gastritis is severe and extensive. Based on the fact that the serum pepsinogen levels provide a precise measure of the extent of chronic atrophic gastritis, we have devised a mass screening method involving serum pepsinogen measurement to identify subjects at high risk of gastric cancer. In 1991, we screened 4,647 workers (male: 4,113, female: 534, mean age: 49.0 years) at a Japanese company using this method. Out of 875 subjects (18.8%) with a serum pepsinogen I level of less than 50 μg/liter and a pepsinogen I/II ratio of less than 3.0, 676 subjects (14.5%) were selected for further investigation by endoscopy. This led to the detection of four subjects (0.086%) with gastric cancer (three in an early stage) and four subjects with adenoma. The cancer detection rate of this new screening method was comparable, and in some respects superior, to that of the traditional barium X‐ray screening. Since the incidence of test‐positive subjects was as low as 10% amongst subjects aged less than 40, this screening method appears to be especially useful for screening of younger generations. The new method is less expensive than the traditional barium X‐ray and subjects experience little discomfort. Further, many serum samples can be quickly measured simultaneously. The results of this study have indicated that serum pepsinogen screening provides a valuable method for detecting gastric cancers.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Significance of Low Serum Pepsinogen Levels to Detect Stomach Cancer Associated with Extensive Chronic Gastritis in Japanese SubjectsJapanese Journal of Cancer Research, 1989
- Radioimmunoassay of serum group I and group II pepsinogens in normal controls and patients with various disordersClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1982
- RELATIONSHIPS AMONG SERUM PEPSINOGEN-I, SERUM PEPSINOGEN-II, AND GASTRIC-MUCOSAL HISTOLOGY - A STUDY IN RELATIVES OF PATIENTS WITH PERNICIOUS-ANEMIA1982
- Atrophic Gastritis and Intestinal Metaplasia in Asymptomatic Hungarian and Italian PopulationsEndoscopy, 1980
- Precancerous changes in the stomach.1976
- A clinical and statistical follow-up study of atrophic gastritisDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1973
- Chronological Transition of the Fundic-Pyloric Border Determined by Stepwise Biopsy of the Lesser and Greater Curvatures of the StomachGastroenterology, 1972
- Chronic Gastritis in Japanese With Reference to High Incidence of Gastric Carcinoma2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1971
- The serum pepsinogen level with special reference to the histology of the gastric mucosaGut, 1963
- Atrophic Gastritis as a Possible Precursor of Gastric Carcinoma and Pernicious Anemia Results of follow‐up examinationsActa Medica Scandinavica, 1960