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Incidence of Metachronous Gastric Cancer After Endoscopic Submucosal Dissection in Helicobacter pylori-uninfected Early Gastric Cancer.

Created on 17 Jul 2026

Authors

Yusuke Kawai, Junnosuke Hayasaka, Yorinari Ochiai, Junji Tanaka, Minoru Oda, Hiroshi Yamato, Yugo Suzuki, Yutaka Mitsunaga, Hiroyuki Odagiri, Akira Matsui, Shu Hoteya

Published in

Digestive diseases and sciences. Jul 16, 2026. Epub Jul 16, 2026.

Abstract

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori)-associated gastric cancer can progress to metachronous gastric cancer even after eradication; however, the incidence of metachronous gastric cancer in H. pylori-uninfected cases remains unclear. We aimed to investigate the incidence of metachronous gastric cancer after endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) in H. pylori-uninfected patients.
This single-center retrospective cohort study included 850 consecutive patients with gastric cancer (850 lesions) who underwent ESD between January 2010 and December 2021. The primary endpoint was the first metachronous gastric cancer detected more than 1 year after ESD. The secondary endpoint was synchronous gastric cancer detected within 1 year of ESD.
In total, 38 and 812 of the patients were H. pylori-uninfected and H. pylori-infected, respectively. Synchronous gastric cancer was less frequent in the H. pylori-uninfected group (0% vs. 7.0%), although the difference was not significant (p = 0.103). Metachronous gastric cancer was significantly less frequent in the H. pylori-uninfected group (0% vs. 16.9%, p = 0.002), and the cumulative incidence was significantly lower (p = 0.011). In exploratory multivariable Firth's penalized Cox regression analyses, H. pylori-uninfected status remained associated with a lower estimated risk of metachronous gastric cancer, although the association did not reach statistical significance.
The incidence of metachronous gastric cancer after ESD for early gastric cancer is lower in H. pylori-uninfected patients than in H. pylori-infected patients. Although these findings should be interpreted as exploratory, they suggest that the optimal post-ESD surveillance strategy for H. pylori-uninfected patients warrants further investigation.

PMID:
42461582
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 17 Jul 2026.

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