“…Up to 3% of patients with clinical symptoms of H. pylori infection may develop gastric cancer [ 4 ], with over 1 million new cases of gastric cancer and nearly 800,000 deaths occurring in 2020, thereby making H. pylori -related gastric cancer the third leading cause of global cancer deaths [ 5 ]. Beyond the local well-established virulence of H. pylori, multiple extra-gastric manifestations have been attributed to H. pylori infection [ 3 , 6 , 7 ]. These manifestations include hematological, cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological, ophthalmic and metabolic syndrome-related disorders and other non-gastric neoplasms [ 3 , 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 ].…”