“…Although two recent large-scale, prospective studies, both performed in a population at high risk for gastric cancer, confirmed H. pylori infection as a definite risk factor for the development of gastric cancer [3,34], the opposite premise, that the eradication of H. pylori infection is an appropriate target for the prevention of gastric cancer, has yet to be confirmed and remains controversial [35,36]. Three randomized, placebo-controlled trials performed in China and Columbia found no significant protective effect following H. pylori eradication [35][36][37], whereas three recently published Japanese studies [10,13,38] reported that H. pylori eradication prevents the development of gastric cancer significantly, even in patients with precancerous gastric lesions. However, these observations did not address the possibility that earlier eradication therapy or other, similar types of intervention aimed at reducing gastric inflammation could be beneficial in high-risk populations [39].…”