Introduction
The overall survival for early gastric cancer (GC) either managed endoscopically or surgically may exceed 96% [1], whereas the majority of cancer cases in the Western world are diagnosed at late stages, and the cumulative 5-year survival is ranging 20–40% [2].
Typically, early-stage cancers are asymptomatic, therefore the clue for lowering the burden of advanced cancer is timely detection whether by upper endoscopy or non-invasive testing.
Endoscopic screening for GC that is recommended in South Korea and Japan would be hardly acceptable in the West, furthermore the cost-effectiveness of such interventions is not justified in the Western populations [3]. Therefore, non-invasive markers for identification of cancer at early stage or at the stage of precancerous lesions are of the highest interest, in particular, if such markers could allow detection of the disease in the window between its onset and symptom development [4]. If a marker is aiming at the detection of precancerous lesions (advanced atrophy, intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia), later regular surveillance of the patients at increased risk may lead to timely cancer identification at early stage [5].
In this review we are going to concentrate on the available and promising biomarkers for GC, but also for precancerous lesion detection.