Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: 10.3390/diagnostics12071746
Title: Assessment of Serum Pepsinogens with and without Co-Testing with Gastrin-17 in Gastric Cancer Risk Assessment—Results from the GISTAR Pilot Study
Authors: Robles, Claudia
Rudzite, Dace
Polaka, Inese
Sjomina, Olga
Tzivian, Lilian
Kikuste, Ilze
Tolmanis, Ivars
Vanags, Aigars
Isajevs, Sergejs
Liepniece-Karele, Inta
Razuka-Ebela, Danute
Parshutin, Sergej
Murillo, Raul
Herrero, Rolando
Young Park, Jin
Leja, Marcis
Keywords: gastric cancer prevention;gastrin-17;public health;screening;serum pepsinogens;3.2 Clinical medicine;3.1 Basic medicine;1.1. Scientific article indexed in Web of Science and/or Scopus database;Clinical Biochemistry;SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Issue Date: Jul-2022
Citation: Robles , C , Rudzite , D , Polaka , I , Sjomina , O , Tzivian , L , Kikuste , I , Tolmanis , I , Vanags , A , Isajevs , S , Liepniece-Karele , I , Razuka-Ebela , D , Parshutin , S , Murillo , R , Herrero , R , Young Park , J & Leja , M 2022 , ' Assessment of Serum Pepsinogens with and without Co-Testing with Gastrin-17 in Gastric Cancer Risk Assessment—Results from the GISTAR Pilot Study ' , Diagnostics , vol. 12 , no. 7 , 1746 , pp. 1-11 . https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12071746
Abstract: Introduction––Serum pepsinogen tests for gastric cancer screening have been debated for decades. We assessed the performance of two pepsinogen assays with or without gastrin-17 for the detection of different precancerous lesions alone or as a composite endpoint in a Latvian cohort. Methods––Within the intervention arm of the GISTAR population-based study, participants with abnormal pepsinogen values by ELISA or latex-agglutination tests, or abnormal gastrin-17 by ELISA and a subset of subjects with all normal biomarker values were referred for upper endoscopy with biopsies. Performance of biomarkers, corrected by verification bias, to detect five composite outcomes based on atrophy, intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia or cancer was explored. Results––Data from 1045 subjects were analysed, of those 273 with normal biomarker results. Both pepsinogen assays showed high specificity (>93%) but poor sensitivity (range: 18.4–31.1%) that slightly improved when lesions were restricted to corpus location (40.5%) but decreased when dysplasia and prevalent cancer cases were included (23.8%). Adding gastrin-17 detection, sensitivity reached 33–45% while specificity decreased (range: 61.1–62%) and referral rate for upper endoscopy increased to 38.6%. Conclusions––Low sensitivity of pepsinogen assays is a limiting factor for their use in population-based primary gastric cancer screening, however their high specificity could be useful for triage.
Description: Funding Information: The work was partly supported by the Latvian Council of Science (Project No. LZP-2018/1-0135, “Research on implementation of a set of measures for prevention of gastric cancer mortality by eradication of H. pylori and timely recognition of precancerous lesions”). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 by the authors.
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12071746
ISSN: 2075-4418
Appears in Collections:Research outputs from Pure / Zinātniskās darbības rezultāti no ZDIS Pure

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