EPSTEIN-BARR VIRUS-ASSOCIATED GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA AMONG JAPANESE-AMERICANS IN HAWAII

Citation
D. Shibata et al., EPSTEIN-BARR VIRUS-ASSOCIATED GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA AMONG JAPANESE-AMERICANS IN HAWAII, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention, 2(3), 1993, pp. 213-217
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
ISSN journal
10559965
Volume
2
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
213 - 217
Database
ISI
SICI code
1055-9965(1993)2:3<213:EVGAAJ>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
This study confirms the observation that some gastric adenocarcinomas contain Epstein-Barr viral (EBV) sequences in their carcinoma cells. E BV sequences were detected by polymerase chain reaction and in situ hy bridization in the tumors of 19 of 187 (10.2%) Japanese-American men a nd women living in Hawaii. The EBV-associated gastric cancers were mor e frequently present in men than in women: 14 of 99 (14.3%) men versus 5 of 88 (5.7%) women (P = 0.046). EBV type A was found in 17 of the 1 9 EBV-associated cancers, a finding consistent with the type A predomi nance in Japanese populations. Intestinal and diffuse-type tumors were both EBV-positive, and moderate to marked inflammation was usually pr esent. The virus was not found in adjacent normal nonneoplastic mucosa l cells or in mucosa showing intestinal metaplasia. EBV-associated tum ors were found at stages 1 or 2 in 53% of cases, compared with 36% of the EBV-negative cancers (P = 0.13). The presence of EBV did not appea r to influence survival. The relatively high incidence of gastric canc er compared to other EBV-associated tumors makes EBV-associated gastri c cancer potentially one of the most common EBV-related tumors in the United States.