## Correct Answer: D. Gastric adenocarcinoma Gastric adenocarcinoma is the correct answer because it is the **only epithelial tumor** among the options. Epithelial tumors arise from the mucosal lining (epithelium) of the stomach, specifically from the gastric glands. Adenocarcinoma is a malignant tumor of glandular epithelium, and gastric adenocarcinoma accounts for >90% of all gastric malignancies in India. The tumor originates from the mucosa and can spread through the submucosa and muscularis propria. Histologically, it shows malignant glandular structures lined by dysplastic epithelial cells. In India, gastric adenocarcinoma remains a significant cause of cancer mortality, with risk factors including *Helicobacter pylori* infection (endemic in Indian populations), chronic atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, and smoking. The Lauren classification divides gastric adenocarcinoma into intestinal type (associated with H. pylori and environmental factors, more common in India) and diffuse type (signet-ring cell carcinoma). Early detection through endoscopic screening in high-risk populations and H. pylori eradication are key preventive strategies in Indian clinical practice. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Gastrointestinal stromal tumor** — GIST is a **mesenchymal tumor**, not epithelial. It arises from the smooth muscle layer (muscularis propria) or interstitial cells of Cajal, not from the mucosal epithelium. GISTs are KIT-positive (CD117+) and are fundamentally different in origin, behavior, and treatment (tyrosine kinase inhibitors like imatinib) compared to epithelial tumors. This is a classic NBE distractor for students who confuse tumor location (stomach) with tumor origin (epithelial vs. mesenchymal). **B. Carcinoid tumor** — Carcinoid is a **neuroendocrine tumor** arising from enterochromaffin cells (APUD cells), not from the mucosal epithelium proper. While it occurs in the stomach, it is classified as a neuroendocrine malignancy, not an epithelial tumor. Gastric carcinoids are often associated with chronic atrophic gastritis and hypergastrinemia (type I carcinoids). The trap here is that carcinoids do occur in the stomach, but their histological origin and classification differ fundamentally from epithelial adenocarcinomas. **C. Lymphoma** — Gastric lymphoma is a **hematologic malignancy** arising from lymphoid tissue (B or T cells), not from the epithelial lining. Primary gastric lymphoma (often MALT lymphoma associated with H. pylori) is a non-epithelial tumor. The NBE trap exploits the fact that lymphoma is a common gastric malignancy in India, but it originates from immune cells in the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, not from the epithelial cells themselves. ## High-Yield Facts - **Epithelial tumors** of the stomach originate from the mucosal lining (gastric glands); adenocarcinoma is the prototype. - **Gastric adenocarcinoma** accounts for >90% of gastric malignancies in India; intestinal type is more common due to H. pylori endemicity. - **H. pylori infection** is the strongest modifiable risk factor for gastric adenocarcinoma in Indian populations; eradication reduces risk by ~40%. - **Mesenchymal tumors** (GIST, leiomyoma) arise from smooth muscle/connective tissue layers, not epithelium; KIT-positive. - **Neuroendocrine tumors** (carcinoid) and **lymphomas** are non-epithelial gastric malignancies; classified separately by WHO. - **Lauren classification**: intestinal type (H. pylori-related, more common in India) vs. diffuse type (signet-ring cell, worse prognosis). ## Mnemonics **EPITHELIAL vs. NON-EPITHELIAL Gastric Tumors** **EPITHELIAL**: Adenocarcinoma (mucosal glands). **NON-EPITHELIAL**: GIST (mesenchymal/KIT+), Carcinoid (neuroendocrine/APUD), Lymphoma (hematologic/immune). Remember: origin of tumor ≠ location of tumor. **H. pylori → Gastric Cancer Pathway (Indian Context)** **H. pylori** → chronic atrophic gastritis → intestinal metaplasia → dysplasia → **adenocarcinoma** (intestinal type). This is the most common pathway in India; eradication breaks the chain. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "stomach" location with multiple tumor types to test whether students confuse tumor **location** (all occur in stomach) with tumor **origin** (only adenocarcinoma is epithelial). Students who memorize "GIST in stomach" without understanding mesenchymal origin fall into this trap. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, a patient with chronic dyspepsia, anemia, and weight loss should raise suspicion for gastric adenocarcinoma, especially if H. pylori serology is positive. Early endoscopic screening in high-risk populations (family history, H. pylori+, atrophic gastritis) and H. pylori eradication therapy are cornerstones of prevention in India. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 15 (Gastrointestinal Tract); Harrison Ch. 297 (Gastric Cancer); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (H. pylori epidemiology in India)_
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