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. 2001 Jan;15(1):87-103.
doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2036.2001.00876.x.

Helicobacter pylori effects on gastritis, gastrin and enterochromaffin-like cells in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and non-Zollinger-Ellison syndrome acid hypersecretors treated long-term with lansoprazole

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Helicobacter pylori effects on gastritis, gastrin and enterochromaffin-like cells in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and non-Zollinger-Ellison syndrome acid hypersecretors treated long-term with lansoprazole

B I Hirschowitz et al. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2001 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Helicobacter pylori is said to cause atrophy of the gastric corpus and enterochromaffin-like cell proliferation in gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GERD) patients treated long-term with a proton pump inhibitor.

Aims: To determine the effect of H. pylori infection on gastritis, enterochromaffin-like cell density and hyperplasia, mucosal atrophy and serum gastrin in patients with gastric hypersecretion (basal acid output gt; 15 mmol/h) with either hypergastrinemia (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome) or normal gastrin (non-Zollinger-Ellison syndrome) before and during long-term treatment with lansoprazole.

Methods: Lansoprazole was individually titrated to reduce basal acid output to < 5 mmol/h (< 1 mmol/h in post-surgical Zollinger-Ellison syndrome). Gastric corpus biopsies were obtained every 6 months before treatment and up to 8 years later.

Results: H. pylori was present in corpus biopsies in approximately 50%, causing active gastritis which resolved rapidly in 15 subjects after elimination of H. pylori. Patchy mild/moderate corpus atrophy was present at entry in two and at the end in four out of 60 patients, one being H. pylori-positive. Intestinal metaplasia (< 10%) was seen in six isolated biopsies (1% of total). H. pylori did not affect serum gastrin, enterochromaffin-like cell density or hyperplasia. Enterochromaffin-like cell density was twice as high in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome as in non-Zollinger-Ellison syndrome patients (241 vs. 126 cells/mm2, P < 0.001). Enterochromaffin-like cells remained normal in the non-Zollinger-Ellison syndrome hypersecretors regardless of H. pylori status.

Conclusion: Corpus enterochromaffin-like cell increases were related to serum gastrin elevation, but neither H. pylori nor long-term treatment with lansoprazole alone or together had any effect on enterochromaffin-like cell density or hyperplasia. Corpus acute gastritis resulted from H. pylori infection, but did not result in mucosal atrophy despite long-term proton pump inhibitor treatment and promptly resolved with loss of H. pylori.

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