It is estimated that smokers have twice as high a risk of developing stomach cancer as compared to non-smokers.
Exposure to certain substances for workers in coal, metal, and rubber industries seem to increase the risk of stomach cancer.
Diets that have large amounts of smoked foods, salted fish and meat, pickled vegetables, and foods with nitrates or nitrites that are common in cured meats are associated with an increased risk of stomach cancer.
Having a personal history of certain types of polyps in the stomach, called adenomas, increase the risk for stomach cancer.
Certain medical conditions such as pernicious anemia, hypertrophic gastropathy, common variable immune deficiency (CVID), or long-term infection with the bacteria H. pylori in the stomach, increase the risk of stomach cancer.