Vui lòng sử dụng định danh này để trích dẫn hoặc liên kết đến tài liệu: http://dspace.hmtu.edu.vn/handle/DHKTYTHD_123/399
Nhan đề : Helicobacter pylori and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue: what’s new
Tác giả : Kuo, Sung-Hsin
Năm xuất bản : 2013
Nhà xuất bản : American Society of Hematology
Tóm tắt : Low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma of the stomach, gastric MALT lymphoma, is associated with Helicobacter pylori infection. The eradication of H pylori using antibiotics is successful in 60% to 80% of affected patients. In contrast to the previous paradigm, we and other investigators have shown that a certain proportion of patients with H pylori–positive early-stage diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) of the stomach with histological evidence of MALT lymphoma, including high-grade transformed gastric MALT lymphoma and gastric DLBCL(MALT), achieved long-term complete pathological remission (pCR) after first-line H pylori eradication therapy, indicating that the loss of H pylori dependence and high-grade transformation are separate events in the progression of gastric lymphoma. In addition, patients with H pylori–positive gastric DLBCL without histological evidence of MALT (gastric pure DLBCL) may also respond to H pylori eradication therapy. A long-term follow-up study showed that patients who achieved pCR remained lymphoma free. Gastric MALT lymphoma is indirectly influenced by H pylori infection through T-cell stimulation, and recent studies have shown that H pylori–triggering chemokines and their receptors, H pylori–associated epigenetic changes, H pylori–regulated miRNA expression, and tumor infiltration by CD4 CD25 regulatory T cells contribute to lymphomagenesis of gastric MALT lymphoma. Recent studies have also demonstrated that the translocation of CagA into B lymphocytes inhibits apoptosis through p53 accumulation, BAD phosphorylation, and the up-regulation of Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL expression. In gastric MALT lymphoma, CagA may stimulate lymphomagenesis directly, through the regulation of signal transduction, and intracellular CagA is associated with H pylori dependence. These findings represent a substantial paradigm shift compared with the classical theory of H pylori–reactive T cells contributing indirectly to the development of MALT lymphoma. In conclusion, a wide range of H pylori–related gastric lymphomas have been identified. The use of antibiotics as the sole first-line therapy for early-stage gastric pure DLBCL requires validation in a prospective study. The clinical and biological significance of the CagA oncoprotein in the lymphomagenesis of gastric MALT lymphoma warrants further study.
URI: http://220.231.117.85:8000/handle/DHKTYTHD_123/399
Bộ sưu tậpHuyết học = Hematology

Danh sách tệp tin đính kèm:
Tên tệp tin Mô tả tệp tin Dung lượngĐịnh dạng  
Hematology-2013-Kuo-109-17.pdf
  Restricted Access
453.99 kBAdobe PDFẢnh bìa
Tải tài liệu Gửi yêu cầu


Khi sử dụng tài liệu trong thư viện số bạn đọc phải tuân thủ đầy đủ luật bản quyền.