Gastric intestinal metaplasia: Management and surveillance strategies.
Gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM) is a common histological finding often associated with infection, placing patients at high risk of gastric cancer.
APA
Attieh P, Al Hazzouri A, et al. (2026). Gastric intestinal metaplasia: Management and surveillance strategies.. World journal of gastrointestinal pathophysiology, 17(1), 118156. https://doi.org/10.4291/wjgp.v17.i1.118156
MLA
Attieh P, et al.. "Gastric intestinal metaplasia: Management and surveillance strategies.." World journal of gastrointestinal pathophysiology, vol. 17, no. 1, 2026, pp. 118156.
PMID
41884204
Abstract
Gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM) is a common histological finding often associated with infection, placing patients at high risk of gastric cancer. The Correa cascade is a pathway that describes the progression of GIM from precancerous to cancerous following a sequence of inflammation-atrophy-metaplasia-dysplasia and carcinoma. Mortality can be reduced through early detection and follow-up screening. There is a wide variation in clinical management of GIM, which makes it difficult to determine the degree of adherence to established guidelines and recommendations. All guidelines emphasize the importance of high-definition endoscopy and targeted biopsy (taken separately from the antrum and corpus) to improve risk stratification. This highlights the need for standardized protocol for GIM management and risk-based follow-up. The main challenge remains the lack of global standardization leading to inconsistency in follow-up initiation and discontinuation, in addition to low adherence to guidelines due to resource limitations. This is progressively enhanced by the development of a personalized follow-up plan based on the individual patient's case and a unified risk-based surveillance protocol.