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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (gastric cancer)
36,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This review examines the evidence for the development of adverse effects due to prolonged gastric acid suppression with proton pump inhibitors. Potential areas of concern regarding long-term proton pump inhibitor use have included: carcinoid formation; development of gastric adenocarcinoma (especially in patients with Helicobacter pylori infection); bacterial overgrowth; enteric infections; and malabsorption of fat, minerals, and vitamins. Prolonged proton pump inhibitor use may lead to enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasia, but has not been demonstrated to increase the risk of carcinoid formation. Long-term proton pump inhibitor treatment has not been documented to hasten the development or the progression of atrophic gastritis to intestinal metaplasia and gastric cancer, although long-term studies are required to allow definitive conclusions. At present, we do not recommend that patients be tested routinely for H. pylori infection when using proton pump inhibitors for prolonged periods. Gastric bacterial overgrowth does increase with acid suppression, but important clinical sequelae, such a higher rate of gastric adenocarcinoma, have not been seen. The risk of enteric infection may increase with acid suppression, although this does not seem to be a common clinical problem with prolonged proton pump inhibitor use. The absorption of fats and minerals does not appear to be significantly impaired with chronic acid suppression. However, vitamin B12 concentration may be decreased when gastric acid is markedly suppressed for prolonged periods (e.g. Zolllinger-Ellison syndrome), and vitamin B12 levels should probably be assessed in patients taking high-dose proton pump inhibitors for many years. Thus, current evidence suggests that prolonged gastric acid suppression with proton pump inhibitors rarely, if ever, produces adverse events. Nevertheless, continued follow-up of patients taking proton pump inhibitors for extended periods will provide greater experience regarding the potential gastrointestinal adverse effects of long-term acid suppression.
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PMID:Review article: potential gastrointestinal effects of long-term acid suppression with proton pump inhibitors. 1142 86

The reduced incidence of gastric cancer, due to a better patients surveillance and more accurate understanding of prophylactic measure, has allowed a detection of early stages as well as cancers with different origin cells. Either the difficulty of differential diagnosis or the various surgical and integrated approaches, make these neoplasm hard to enroll in standard treatment protocols. Our experience consists of 5 clinical cases with four different histology: lymphoma, leiomioma, carcinoid and gastrinoma. A rare case of secondary involvement of the stomach by an adrenal adenocarcinoma is also described. Lymphomas benefit of the surgical therapy only in early stages (IE, IIE), eventually associated to chemio- and radiotherapy, in relationship with local diffusion of the disease; gastric resection is more supported than gastrectomy. Polychemotherapy, with or without radiotherapy, is used for advanced stages (IIIE and IVE), leaving to surgery the role of controlling hemorrhagic or occlusion compliances. GIST have a different therapeutic approach: surgery represents the only choice since chemio- and radiotherapy have no benefits for the biological characteristics of such neoplasm. Surgery is the ideal choice for the carcinoids with some indications for chemio radiotherapy in the palliative surgery or in the relapsing. We emphasize the rarity of the secondary gastric neoplasm coming from the suprarenal glands. We analyze our diagnostic and therapeutic protocols, comparing them with the current literature.
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PMID:[Direct experience in the treatment of unusual, primary, and secondary malignant tumors of the stomach]. 1155 72

Gastric carcinoid tumors associated with chronic atrophic gastritis type A have been reported to show good prognosis, because invasion and metastasis are rare. We report a case of gastric carcinoid tumor associated with hypergastrinemia that showed no malignant changes for 12 years. A 15-year-old man with abdominal discomfort underwent endoscopic examination. A polypoid lesion was detected on the atrophic mucosa of the fundus, and was diagnosed as a carcinoid tumor. Serological examination revealed a high level of anti-parietal-cell antibody, suggesting that the patient had chronic atrophic gastritis type A. The tumor was treated by endoscopic mucosal resection. Follow-up examinations were performed for 12 years, but showed no recurrence. This case confirms that gastric carcinoid tumors associated with chronic atrophic gastritis type A may have a good prognosis.
Gastric Cancer 2000 Dec 27
PMID:Benign gastric carcinoid tumor with hypergastrinemia followed up for 12 years. 1198 31

Gastric cancer is one of the world's most common cancers and is a leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Neoplasia of the stomach is mainly composed of adenocarcinomas, which for more than 95% of cases. Although mesenchymal tumors (i.e., stromal tumors, leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas, and schwannomas), primary lymphomas, and carcinoid tumors can also arise in the stomach, malignant tumors of these types occur much less often.
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PMID:Molecular and biologic basis of upper gastrointestinal malignancy. Gastric carcinoma. 1242 50

We report a patient with multiple gastric carcinoid tumors without hypergastrinemia. An abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan was performed in a 66-year-old Japanese man who had abdominal discomfort. An abnormal, round, 2.5 cm mass close to the lesser curvature of the stomach was detected. Multiple small gastric carcinoid tumors were also detected by endoscopy. A total gastrectomy with lymph node dissection was performed after it was determined that the round mass was a lymph node metastasis of carcinoid tumor. Further pathological investigation of the surgical specimen revealed multiple gastric carcinoid tumors with severe lymphovascular invasion. The carcinoid tumors in the present patient were not related to hypergastrinemia. These lesions could not be grouped as any of the three types of gastric carcinoid tumors in the recent classification. Furthermore, as a simple distal gastrectomy is the standard treatment for multiple carcinoid tumors of the stomach, we recommend that a precise histopathological evaluation should be performed before an appropriate curative surgical treatment is selected.
Gastric Cancer 2003
PMID:Gastric carcinoid tumors with aggressive lymphovascular invasion and lymph node metastasis. 1471 21

We report a patient with a minute gastric carcinoid tumor with lymph node metastasis, and a small gastric cancer. A 50-year-old man having a diagnosis of an elevated lesion on the anterior wall of the gastric body, detected by a series of upper gastrointestinal examinations, was referred to the Cancer Institute Hospital. Careful upper fluoroscopy disclosed a small superficial depressed lesion with converging folds and a superficial elevated lesion covered with nonspecific gastric mucosa. With a final preoperative diagnosis of depressed early cancer and minute carcinoid tumor of the stomach, made by upper gastrointestinal examinations including biopsy, the patient underwent segmental gastrectomy and perigastric lymph node dissection. Histological examination of the resected specimen revealed a lymph node metastasis from a gastric carcinoid tumor of 5-mm diameter, in addition to an early gastric cancer of poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. Small gastric carcinoid tumors have been regarded as being benign neoplasms biologically. However, the case we present suggests that attention should be paid to the possibility of metastasis at the time of treatment for a minute sporadic gastric carcinoid tumor. We therefore discuss the malignant potential of these tumors, mainly from the viewpoint of histopathological classification, to gain understanding so that the patients can be treated adequately.
Gastric Cancer 2003
PMID:Minute gastric carcinoid tumor with regional lymph node metastasis. 1471 22

We report a case of liver metastases of a minute rectal carcinoid less than 5mm in diameter, which was found during the postoperative follow-up course of a stomach cancer patient. For the early stomach cancer, laparoscope-assisted distal gastrectomy with lymph node dissection was performed on August 26, 1998. Later, abdominal CT revealed space-occupying lesions in the liver (S2). Metastatic tumors of the stomach cancer were suspected, but further examination revealed that the lesions were metastatic tumors due to a rectal carcinoid tumor. Ten months later, metastatic carcinoid tumors were found in the liver (S1, S5, S6, S7, S8). Subsegmentectomy of the liver (S7) and microwave coagulation therapy (S1, S5, S6, S8) were performed. Carcinoid tumors metastatic to the lymph nodes, liver, and other areas have been reported, but all were larger than 20mm in diameter. In this case, the primary tumor was less than 5mm in diameter, which is extremely rare. This patient was successfully treated with lateral segmentectomy, subsegmentectomy (S7), microwave coagulation therapy of the liver, and transanal extirpation. She is presently in a good condition and has had no recurrence of the carcinoid tumor from ten months after the last hepatectomy.
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PMID:Liver metastases of a minute rectal carcinoid less than 5mm in diameter: a case report. 1536 45

A case of a Borrmann type 2 advanced gastric cancer with endocrine differentiation is described. Histologically, the cancer was either composed of cells arranged in a tubular pattern or formed solid nests of various sizes. The tubular pattern was composed of a moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma. The histology showed partial carcinoid tumor-like features. Cancer cells inside solid nests had a signet-ring cell-like appearance. Periodic-acid Schiff (PAS) staining was positive in the cytoplasm of a few of the cells found in the tubular pattern and in the mucus in some lumens and on the apical surface of cells in some lumens, but PAS did not stain cancer cells in the solid nests. Neither cancer cells nor mucus in the lumens were stained with alcian blue. All cancer cells were strongly positive for Grimelius silver stain, and most of the cancer cells stained positively for chromogranin A. Electron microscopic examination showed electron dense neuroendocrine granules in the cytoplasm of cancer cells. Cancer cells were stained positively for pancytokeratin, cytokeratin 8/18 and carcinoembryonic antigen. Muc 1 mucin glycoprotein staining was positive along the cell surfaces of cancer cells, but Muc 2, 5AC and 6 stainings were negative, although Muc 3 stained positively in the cytoplasm of a few cancer cells. The present case is a gastric tubular adenocarcinoma with Muc 1-positive, neutral- and acid mucin-negative signet-ring cell-like cells, which is associated with neuroendocrine differentiation.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine differentiation of periodic-acid Schiff and Alcian blue-negative signet-ring cell-like cells and tubular adenocarcinoma cells within a gastric cancer. 1551 70

Here, a case of a patient with incidental finding of a carcinoid tumor of the ampulla of Vater, who was treated with endoscopic snare papillectomy, is reported. A 62-year-old male was admitted to our hospital due to a carcinoid tumor of the ampulla of Vater, which was found during follow-up endoscopy after an endoscopic mucosal resection of early gastric cancer. No lymphadenopathy or visceral metastasis was found on an abdominal CT scan, In-111 octerotide scan and EUS. The ampulla was then en bloc removed by endoscopic snare papillectomy. The resected specimen revealed a 0.7 x 0.5 x 0.1 cm sized carcinoid tumor. All margins of resection were negative for tumor. After six months of follow-up, there was no evidence of recurrence and metastasis, either endoscopically or radiologically. To our knowledge, this case is the first report of an ampullary carcinoid tumor treated by endoscopic snare papillectomy in Korea.
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PMID:A carcinoid tumor of the ampulla of Vater treated by endoscopic snare papillectomy. 1568 15

Little is known about the natural course of multiple gastric carcinoids associated with type A gastritis. Between 1993 and 2003, we enrolled eight patients, diagnosed as having multiple gastric carcinoids associated with type A gastritis, in a follow-up program without surgical resection. In these patients, endoscopy showed multiple small polyps on the gastric body, with nonantral atrophic gastritis. Histologically, biopsy specimens obtained from the polyps revealed carcinoid tumors. The serum gastrin level was found to be very high in all patients, and testing for anti-parietal cell antibody was positive in seven. The mean follow-up was 5.8 years (range, 1.5-10.8 years). The levels of serum gastrin increased in all patients, but, endoscopically, the carcinoid tumors did not change in size. Neither hepatic nor lymphatic metastasis was detected on abdominal computed tomography (CT). These patients were free of the development or metastasis of carcinoids, in spite of their continuous hypergastrinemia. It was concluded that multiple gastric carcinoids associated with type A gastritis may be indolent.
Gastric Cancer 2005
PMID:Long-term follow up of patients with multiple gastric carcinoids associated with type A gastritis. 1574 74


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