Abstract:
Introduction. Despite worldwide decreasing trends in the incidence of gastric cancer, the disease remains a significant
global health burden, one of the leading causes of cancer death worldwide, and its prevention is a priority for the health
system. Intestinal-type gastric carcinoma originates in dysplastic epithelium, which, in turn, develops in the environment
of chronic atrophic gastritis and gastric intestinal metaplasia.
Material and methods. Narrative literature review. A bibliographic search was conducted in the databases PubMed,
Hinari, SpringerLink, National Center for Biotechnology Information, and Medline. Articles published between 2000-2024
were selected based on the following keywords: “gastric intestinal metaplasia” and “gastric epithelial dysplasia”, used in
different combinations with the terms “epidemiology”, “clinical picture”, “risk factors”, “classification”, “diagnosis”, and
“management” to maximize the search yield. After processing the information from the databases according to the search
criteria, 215 full articles were found. The final bibliography contains 34 relevant sources, considered representative of the
materials published on the subject of this summary article.
Results. Gastric intestinal metaplasia represents the replacement of the gastric epithelium with two types of intestinaltype
epithelium (enteric or colonic) as an adaptive response to chronic injury, while gastric epithelial dysplasia is defined
as unequivocal neoplastic change of the gastric epithelium (intraepithelial neoplasia) without evidence of stromal invasion.
Gastric intestinal metaplasia and gastric epithelial dysplasia are preneoplastic lesions of gastric cancer. The estimated
annual risk of gastric adenocarcinoma in patients with gastric intestinal metaplasia is 0.13-0.25%, and in patients with
gastric epithelial dysplasia it is 1.36%, depending on the extent and type of the lesion.
Conclusions. Despite the lack of a specific treatment for gastric intestinal metaplasia, the management strategy, according
to current clinical guidelines, includes eradication of Helicobacter pylori infection, screening for early detection of gastric
cancer, and control of other risk factors. Appropriate management of high-grade gastric epithelial dysplasia requires
endoscopic resection due to its potential for progression to carcinoma and the possibility of coexisting carcinoma. For
low-grade gastric epithelial dysplasia, which has a lower risk of malignant transformation, scientists recommend annual
endoscopic surveillance with biopsy and histological examination.