Yun-sheng Chang
Peking University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Yun-sheng Chang.
International Journal of Cancer | 1999
Wei-Cheng You; Ji-You Li; William J. Blot; Yun-sheng Chang; Mao-lin Jin; Mitchell H. Gail; Lian Zhang; Wei-dong Liu; Jun-Ling Ma; Yuan-ren Hu; Steven D. Mark; Pelayo Correa; Joseph F. Fraumeni; Guang-wei Xu
The pathogenesis of gastric cancer (GC), particularly of the intestinal type, is thought to involve a multistep and multifactorial process. Our objective was to determine the rates of transition from early to advanced gastric lesions in a population in Linqu County, China, where the GC rates are among the highest in the world. An endoscopic screening survey was launched in 1989–1990 among 3,399 residents aged 34–64 years with precancerous lesions diagnosed from biopsies taken from 7 standard locations in the stomach and from any suspicious sites. The cohort was subsequently followed, with endoscopic and histopathologic examinations conducted in 1994. Logistic regression analysis was used to estimate odds ratios (ORs) of progression to advanced lesions of various levels of severity as a function of age, sex and baseline pathology. The rates of progression were higher among older subjects, among men and among subjects with more extensive gastric lesions. 34 incident GCs were identified during the follow‐up period. The ORs of GC, adjusted for age and sex, varied from 17.1, for those with baseline diagnoses of superficial intestinal metaplasia (IM), to 29.3, for those with deep IM or mild dysplasia (DYS) or IM with glandular atrophy and neck hyperplasia, to 104.2, for those with moderate or severe DYS, as compared with subjects with superficial gastritis (SG) or chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) at baseline. Our prospective study of a high‐risk population revealed sharp increases in the risk of GC and advanced precursor lesions according to the severity of lesions diagnosed at the start of follow‐up. Int. J. Cancer, 83:615‐619, 1999. Published 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
European Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2001
Wei-Cheng You; Yun-sheng Chang; John P. Heinrich; Ju-Ling Ma; Wei-dong Liu; Lian Zhang; Linda Morris Brown; Chung S. Yang; Mitchell H. Gail; Joseph F. Fraumeni; Guang-wei Xu
Gastric cancer is the second most frequent cause of death from cancer in the world and the leading cause of death from cancer in China. In September 1995, we launched a randomized multi‐intervention trial to inhibit the progression of precancerous gastric lesions in Linqu County, Shandong Province, an area of China with one of the worlds highest rates of gastric cancer. Treatment compliance was measured by pill counts and quarterly serum concentrations of vitamin C, vitamin E and S‐allyl cysteine. In 1999, toxicity information was collected from each trial participant to evaluate treatment‐related side‐effects during the trial. Compliance rates were 93% and 92.9% for 39 months of treatment with the vitamins/mineral and garlic preparation, respectively. The means for serum concentrations of vitamins C and E were 7.2 μg/ml and 1695 μg/dl among subjects in the active treatment groups compared with 3.1 μg/ml and 752 μg/dl among subjects in the placebo treatment group, respectively. No significant differences in side‐effects were observed between the placebo treatment group and the vitamins/mineral and garlic preparation treatment groups during the 39‐month trial period.
Annals of Epidemiology | 2001
Wei-Cheng You; Lian Zhang; Kai-Feng Pan; Ji Jiang; Yun-sheng Chang; Guillermo I. Perez-Perez; Wei-dong Liu; Jun-Ling Ma; Mitchell H. Gail; Martin J. Blaser; Joseph F. Fraumeni; Guang-wei Xu
BACKGROUND Studies in adult populations in selected countries with widely varying rates of gastric cancer have shown a weak correlation between gastric cancer mortality rates and the prevalence of CagA+ strains of H. pylori. However, only limited data are available in ethnically homogenous populations with varying rates in the same region. METHODS; We compared the prevalence of H. pylori in general and of CagA+ strains in particular among children in Shandong Province, China in areas at high (Linqu County) and low risk (Cangshan County) of gastric cancer. H. pylori status among children aged 3 to 12 years was determined by 13C-UBT, and CagA status was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Because of the difficulty in obtaining blood from young children aged 3 to 4 years and from some children aged 5 years, CagA status was determined among part of children 5 years old and children 6 to 12 years old. RESULTS; Among 98 children aged 3 to 12 years in Linqu, 68 (69.4%) was H. pylori-positive, as compared with 29 (28.7%) among 101 children in Cangshan. Among children positive for 13C-UBT, the proportion of the CagA+ strains were identified was 46 (88.5%) of 52 in Linqu and 13 (81.3%) of 16 in Cangshan, respectively. CONCLUSIONS The prevalence of H. pylori was nearly three times higher among children in Linqu than in Cangshan, which may contribute to the large differential in gastric cancer rates for two neighboring populations in Shandong Province.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001
Linda Morris Brown; Terry L. Thomas; Jun-Ling Ma; Yun-sheng Chang; Wei-Cheng You; Wei-dong Liu; Lian Zhang; Mitchell H. Gail
Little is known about the mode of transmission of Helicobacter pylori, one of the most common human bacterial infections. Some domestic animals, including the cat, have been suggested as a reservoir of H. pylori disease, but the data have been inconsistent. This paper evaluates the role of exposure to pets and other domestic animals in the etiology of H. pylori in a rural area of China with a high prevalence of H. pylori infection. In this double-blind, population-based, cross-sectional investigation, interviews were completed with 3,288 (1994 seropositive, 1,019 seronegative, 275 indeterminate) H. pylori-infected adults enrolled in a randomized intervention trial in Linqu County, Shandong Province, China. We found no evidence to suggest that exposure to pets or other domestic animals during either childhood or adulthood was related to the prevalence of H. pylori infection. In fact, odds ratios (ORs) were reduced for subjects who had kept a cat (OR = 0.7, 95% CI = 0.4-1.0) or any animal (OR = 0.5, 95% CI = 0.3-0.9) in the house as an adult, or a cat as a child (OR = 0.7, 95% CI =0.5-1.0). ORs were also reduced for all 11 types of animal studied that subjects had kept in their courtyard as an adult. These findings suggest that zoonotic transmission, including that from domestic cats, is an unlikely route of H. pylori infection in this rural Chinese population.Little is known about the mode of transmission of Helicobacter pylori, one of the most common human bacterial infections. Some domestic animals, including the cat, have been suggested as a reservoir of H. pylori disease, but the data have been inconsistent. This paper evaluates the role of exposure to pets and other domestic animals in the etiology of H. pylori in a rural area of China with a high prevalence of H. pylori infection. In this double-blind, population-based, cross-sectional investigation, interviews were completed with 3288 (1994 seropositive, 1019 seronegative, 275 indeterminate) H. pylori-infected adults enrolled in a randomized intervention trial in Linqu County, Shandong Province, China. We found no evidence to suggest that exposure to pets or other domestic animals during either childhood or adulthood was related to the prevalence of H. pylori infection. In fact, odds ratios (ORs) were reduced for subjects who had kept a cat (OR = 0.7, 95% CI = 0.4?1.0) or any animal (OR =0.5, 95% CI =0.3?0.9) in the house as an adult, or a cat as a child (OR =0.7, 95% CI = 0.5?1.0). ORs were also reduced for all 11 types of animal studied that subjects had kept in their courtyard as an adult. These findings suggest that zoonotic transmission, including that from domestic cats, is an unlikely route of H. pylori infection in this rural Chinese population.
Japanese Journal of Cancer Research | 1992
Wei-Cheng You; William J. Blot; Yun-sheng Chang; Ji-You Li; Mao-lin Jin; Yongxing Zhao; Robert W. Kneller; Yu-Quan Xie; Lian Zhang; Guang-wei Xu; Joseph F. Fraumeni
The anatomic distribution of precancerous gastric lesions among 3,400 residents in Linqu, Shandong Province of China, was compared with the anatomic distribution of stomach cancer (SC) among 959 patients in Tokyo, Japan. The incidence of SC is high in both areas, and locations within the stomach of the precancerous and malignant lesions were classified using similar criteria. Chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) affected 98% of the population in Linqu, with intestinal metaplasia (IM) the most severe diagnosis in 33% and dysplasia (DYS) in 20%. Neither the SC nor precancerous lesions were uniformly distributed in the stomach. Among the DYS 3% were along the greater curvature of the body, 15% along the lesser curvature of the body, 25% in the angulus, 22% along the lesser curvature of the antrum, and 34% elsewhere in the antrum. Among the SC the corresponding percentages were 2, 16, 28, 25 and 29. The similarity to the SC distribution increased gradually from CAG to IM to DYS, providing further evidence for the multistage progression of precancerous gastric lesions.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2000
Wei-Cheng You; Lian Zhang; Mitchell H. Gail; Yun-sheng Chang; Wei-dong Liu; Jun-Ling Ma; Ji-You Li; Mao-lin Jin; Yuan-ren Hu; Chung-shu Yang; Martin J. Blaser; Pelayo Correa; William J. Blot; Joseph F. Fraumeni; Guang-wei Xu
Cancer Research | 1993
Wei-Cheng You; William J. Blot; Ji-You Li; Yun-sheng Chang; Mao-lin Jin; Robert W. Kneller; Lian Zhang; Zhong-xiang Han; Xiang-rui Zeng; Wei-dong Liu; Lei Zhao; Pelayo Correa; Joseph F. Fraumeni; Guang-wei Xu
Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 1992
Robert W. Kneller; Wei-Cheng You; Yun-sheng Chang; Wei-dong Liu; Lion Zhang; Lei Zhao; Guang-wei Xu; Joseph F. Fraumeni; William J. Blot
International Journal of Epidemiology | 2002
Linda Morris Brown; Terry L Thomas; Jun-Ling Ma; Yun-sheng Chang; Wei-Cheng You; Wei-dong Liu; Lian Zhang; David Pee; Mitchell H. Gail
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1998
Wei-Cheng You; Lian Zhang; Mitchell H. Gail; Jun-Ling Ma; Yun-sheng Chang; William J. Blot; Ji-You Li; Cai-lin Zhao; Wei-dong Liu; Hui-qing Li; Yuan-reng Hu; Juan Carlos Bravo; Pelayo Correa; Guang-wei Xu; Joseph F. Fraumeni