Gayle,
It's well known that individuals infected with H. pylori have an increased risk of gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma, but it's still a rare cancer of the stomach. But did you know that individuals infected with H. pylori have a reduced risk of gastric cardia cancer, esophageal adenocarcinoma, and GERD? Did you know that the evidence suggests that H. pylori may protect against asthma, metabolic syndrome, type II diabetes, and, (as I mentioned in my original post), obesity?
In a perfect world, your aversion to H. pylori would be understandable - but we don't live in a perfect world.
Everything has advantages and disadvantages - nothing is perfect. All food, for example, contains lectins, so we can't avoid them, much to our chagrin. The best we can hope for in every situation, and in every association with other organisms, is that the benefits outweigh the risks. With H. pylori, it appears that the benefits do outweigh the risks. The quote below comes from an article titled "Who are we? Indigenous microbes and the ecology of human diseases", which can be read in it's entirety at the link below. I've highlighted the symbiotic effects of H. pylori in red, for easier reference:
The second example is the interaction of the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori with humans, and the consequences of ending this intricate and longstanding relationship. In fact, H. pylori can be regarded as a paradigm of how changes in indigenous microbiota affect human health (Fig 2). Studies of the gastric helicobacters in other mammals, and of human migration patterns over time (Ghose et al, 2002; Falush et al, 2003), suggest that theforebears of modern H. pylori have been present in our ancestors since well before we became humans. The bacterium is also of interest because diagnostic tools are now able to determine its presence or absence in the human stomach, and epidemiological methods can study its effects on human health. Although H. pylori was once present in almost every adult human, the bacterium is now rapidly disappearing from human populations owing to changes in sanitation, demographics and antibiotic usage. Today, fewer than 10% of children in the USA harbour this bacterium in their stomach. When present, H. pylori is the single dominant species in the stomach (Bik et al, 2006), so its disappearance is potentially significant. Through its pro-inflammatory effects, H. pylori modulates immunological, endocrine and physiological functions in the stomach (Blaser & Atherton, 2004), with both local and systemic manifestations (Fig 2). The biological costs of carrying H. pylori include peptic ulcers and adenocarcinoma of the distal stomach. The (cag+) strains that interact to the greatest extent chemically with their hosts convey the highest risks. Conversely, these strains also protect against gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and its consequences, including oesophageal adenocarcinoma, owing in part to their effects on gastric-acid secretion (Peek & Blaser, 2002). These observations are consistent with the rise of these diseases wherever H. pylori is disappearing, and therefore provide the first definitive example of a group of chronic diseases caused by changes in the human microbiota. GERD has been linked to asthma, and preliminary results now support a link between the disappearance of H. pylori and the increase in asthma cases. In addition, H. pylori affects gastric hormones that have a role in energy homeostasis, such as leptin and ghrelin; a link between its disappearance and the increasing prevalence of metabolic syndrome, type II diabetes and obesity has also been postulated (Blaser & Atherton, 2004).
http://www.nature.com/embor/journal/v7/ ... 400812.pdf
Every organism has a reason for existence, and in the case of virtually all of the microbes that share our body with us, that reason is symbiosis. The bottom line is, in rare instances, H. pylori can increase the risk of a rare type of cancer, but in the vast majority of cases, it apparently provides numerous significant benefits to offset that tiny risk.
Tex