Overview of EBV associated Gastric carcinoma

Gastric carcinoma Most cases of stomach cancers are gastric carcinomas, which can be divided into a number of subtypes including gastric adenocarcinomas.Lymphomas and mesenchymal tumors may also develop in the stomach. Early symptoms may include heartburn, upper abdominal pain, nausea and loss of appetite.Later signs and symptoms may include weight loss, yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes, vomiting, difficulty swallowing and blood in the stool among others.The cancer may spread from the stomach to other parts of the body, particularly the liver, lungs, bones, lining of the abdomen and lymph nodes.


ID Literature Title Group
1 30867819 Genome-wide profiling of Epstein-Barr virus integration by targeted sequencing in Epstein-Barr virus associated malignancies.
VIS-cistrome
2 30872350 A virome-wide clonal integration analysis platform for discovering cancer viral etiology.
VIS-cistrome
3 31481499 Integrated Pan-Cancer Map of EBV-Associated Neoplasms Reveals Functional Host-Virus Interactions.
VIS-cistrome
Contents
Description
Group Note
  • Mutation Tag: literature about this virus mutation and click the eye icon to see detail mutation information in literature
  • VIS-cistrome Tag: literature associated this virus integration and click the eye icon to see detail information of 3 cistrome factors (histone modification, transcription factor binding site and chromatin accessibility)