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Gastric intestinal metaplasia: Management and surveillance strategies.

World journal of gastrointestinal pathophysiology 2026 Vol.17(1) p. 118156

Attieh P, Al Hazzouri A, Al Qassab M, Mansour E, Rizk N, Karam K, Fiani E, Farhat SG

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Gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM) is a common histological finding often associated with infection, placing patients at high risk of gastric cancer.

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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.