Rapid Communication
Copyright ©2006 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 21, 2006; 12(31): 5033-5036
Published online Aug 21, 2006. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v12.i31.5033
Table 1 Allelic distribution of PGC polymorphism according to the type of gastric lesion or its absence n (%)
Allele 1carrierAllele 2 carrierAllele 3/4 carrierAllele 5 carrierAllele 6 carrier
Controls (n = 127)2 (1.6)31 (24.4)39 (30.7)37 (19.1)92 (72.4)
All cases (n = 99)1 (1.0)30 (30.3)33 (33.3)39 (39.4)47 (47.5)
AIM (n = 42)-16 (38.1)14 (33.3)16 (38.1)18 (42.9)
GC (n = 57)1 (1.8)14 (24.6)19 (33.3)23 (40.4)29 (50.9)
Table 2 Association of PGC Allele 6 carriers and risk for development of associated lesions and invasive gastric adenocarcinoma
Allele 6 carrierPOR95% CI
n (%)
Controls (n = 127)92 (72.4)1.00Reference
All cases (n = 99)47 (47.5)< 0.0010.340.20-0.60
AIM (n = 42)18 (42.9)< 0.0010.280.14-0.59
GC (n = 57)29 (50.9)0.0040.390.21-0.75
Table 3 Frequencies of PGC Allele 6 carriers within populations
PopulationnAllele 6 Carriersn (%)
Our StudyCaucasian (Porto, Portugal)12792 (72.4)
Ohtaki et al, 1997Asian (Fukui, Japan)17782 (46.3)
Liu et al, 2003Asian (Shenyang, China)4224 (57.1)
Asian (Zhuanghe, China)11369 (61.0)