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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (
gastric cancer
)
36,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gastric cancer
is rare in children. The case of a 5-year-old girl advanced well differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma of the gastric cardia and abdominal
carcinomatosis
is described. This child is the youngest patient with cancer of the stomach reported in our population.
...
PMID:[Gastric cancer in children: report of a case]. 858 Apr 59
Present status of
gastric cancer
surgery in Japan and several new procedures are reviewed in this article. Japanese treatment results of this disease were significantly better than Western results even when stages were adjusted. Generally speaking, Japanese surgical procedures are more aggressive and meticulous compared with the Western approach, and these attitudes have produced the difference in survival. Particularly, systematic lymph node (LN) dissection is included as a standard procedure, and the adjacent organs are frequently resected when tumor invades them. The latest topics in surgery are the transdiaphragmatic approach for procedures in the mediastinum, para-aortic LN dissection, computer-assisted rational lymphadenectomy, LN imaging for complete dissection, removal of the peritoneum, and hyperthermo-chemotherapy for peritoneal
carcinomatosis
. Consideration of postoperative quality of life (QOL) is a new trend, and many interesting procedures have been proposed to maintain QOL, such as endoscopic mucosal resection and laparoscopic wedge resection for early cancer, pylorus-preserving gastric resection to reduce dumping syndrome, pancreas-preserving total gastrectomy to reduce fistula and postoperative diabetes.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment for gastric cancer: the Japanese approach. 865 20
Even with extended surgery, including systematic lymphadenectomy of the lymph node compartment II, only half of the patients with locally advanced
gastric cancer
(LAGC)-which comprises stages IIIA, IIIB, and IV-undergo macroscopic and microscopic tumor-free resection (i.e., R0 resection, according to UICC 1987/AICC 1988). An improvement in this situation is best accomplished by preoperative treatment modalities to increase the R0 resection rate and by preoperative and postoperative treatment to reduce local recurrences and distant metastases. For LAGC, which includes approximately two thirds of patients with locoregionally confined tumors, preoperative chemotherapy (CTx) represents a promising approach. Among a group of patients with surgically or clinically staged unresectable LAGC, approximately half underwent R0 resection after downstaging induced by active CTx. The long-term survival of these patients seems to be improved. Even in patients who had primarily unresectable tumors as defined by explorative laparotomy, the long-term survival was about 20% after preoperative CTx and subsequent surgery. Based on these experiences, randomized trials investigating preoperative CTx versus surgery alone are clearly needed to define whether such an approach has an impact on RO resection rates and survival of patients with LAGC. Preconditions for such trials are clinical staging procedures, including endoscopic ultrasonography (T category) and surgical laparoscopy plus lavage (excluding peritoneal
carcinomatosis
), and a standardized surgical procedure.
...
PMID:Preoperative chemotherapy in gastric cancer. 889 45
The incidence of gastric adenocarcinoma has decreased dramatically in most Western countries over the past five decades. However, the five-year survival rate remains poor and late diagnosis is one of the main reasons for the lack of marked improvement in outcome. More than 50% of the patients found to have advanced local (stage T III), or systemic (stage T IV)
gastric cancer
at the time of diagnosis. This review article examines the current state of chemotherapeutic regimens additive to surgery, based on a computer-supported literature search (MED-LINE and CANCERLIT). Since 1980 15 randomized studies have been performed to evaluate the efficacy of systemic adjuvant chemotherapy. Of these, 13 were published in the Western English literature and 2 were Japanese studies, encompassing a total of over 2000 patients. In 3 studies adjuvant chemotherapy was administered intraperitoneally. An evaluation of these studies failed to demonstrate any advantage for the outcome of chemotherapy on patients with curative resected gastric carcinoma. Thus, according to present knowledge, this form of adjuvant treatment cannot be recommended for routine clinical management. In order to evaluate the effect of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, 17 randomized studies have been reviewed. In 6 studies (3 Western studies, 3 Japanese studies) neoadjuvant chemotherapy was investigated in patients with potentially curative resectable gastric carcinoma. 11 Western studies reported the results of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in cases of locally advanced disease. It appears that neoadjuvant chemotherapy of locally advanced non-resectable
gastric cancer
in patients who do not have distant metastases and/or "carcinosis peritonei" reduces tumor size in 30-40% of the patients, thus enabling radical resection in a second look operation. The efficacy of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in potentially resectable gastric carcinoma cannot be definitely assessed at the present time since only scant, preliminary findings are available. Future goals for the treatment of gastric carcinoma should include studies evaluating preoperative chemotherapy using effective, but less toxic substances, based on exact tumor-staging by means of endoluminal sonography. Furthermore, research projects investigating the value of intraperitoneal therapeutic regimens such as hyperthermic chemoperfusion or intraperitoneal instillation of the requisite substances in the prevention of intraperitoneal
carcinomatosis
and local recurrence will be of great importance.
...
PMID:[The value of adjuvant and neoadjuvant chemotherapy in treatment of stomach carcinoma]. 896 93
Leptomeningeal involvement is usually reported as a secondary event in advanced, already diagnosed, gastric adenocarcinoma. We report a case of leptomeningeal
carcinomatosis
in which identification of mucus-secreting "signet-ring" carcinoma cells in the cerebrospinal fluid allowed the diagnosis of an otherwise asymptomatic
gastric cancer
. This is one of the very few reported cases manifesting as such in the medical literature.
...
PMID:Meningeal carcinomatosis as the presenting manifestation of gastric adenocarcinoma. 904 Feb 17
Continuous hyperthermic peritoneal perfusion (CHPP) with anticancer agents in warm saline was performed in 10 patients with cancer of the digestive tract and peritoneal
carcinomatosis
after resection of primary and metastatic lesions or both. Eight patients had colorectal cancer and one patient had recurring
gastric cancer
. CHPP was performed using saline containing mitomycin-C and 5-flurouracil at 42 degrees C to 43 degrees C for 60 minutes. One patient with pancreatic cancer received CHPP twice. After CHPP, the preoperative ascites of three patients disappeared. Four patients died of malignancy within 1 year of CHPP and one patient died of respiratory failure 5 months post-CHPP. The remaining five patients survived for more than 1 year after CHPP. There were no significant immediate postoperative complications, except for transient changes in liver function, white blood cell count and serum albumin level. While CHPP treatment appears to be a safe method of treatment for peritoneal
carcinomatosis
, its long term benefits need further investigation.
...
PMID:Continuous hyperthermic peritoneal perfusion for peritoneal carcinomatosis. 906 2
Hemolytic uremic syndrome spontaneously arises in a few patients with advanced cancer, but it is more commonly related to the use of certain chemotherapeutic agents. Mitomycin-C is, etiologically, the most common causative agent inducing hemolytic uremic syndrome, in a dose dependent manner. We report this syndrome, attributable to mitomycin-C at a cumulative dose of 40 mg/m2, in a
gastric cancer
patient. A 42-year-old female with stage III gastric cancer underwent radical gastrectomy and was given mitomycin-C at 10 mg/m2 intravenously every four weeks as adjuvant therapy. Hemolytic uremic syndrome was diagnosed three months after the last dose of mitomycin-C administration. The most prominent symptoms included pallor, hypertension and anasarca, with laboratory evidence of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, azotemia and hyperkalemia. Her disease was progressive, but fortunately stabilized after staphylococcus column A dialysis. Her disease remained in remission for 24 months from the time of diagnosis, and then relapsed in the form of peritoneal
carcinomatosis
with partial intestinal obstruction.
...
PMID:Mitomycin-C induced hemolytic uremic syndrome: a case report and literature review. 915 2
We report a 64-year-old woman who developed nausea, headache, and consciousness disturbance. She was well until four years before the onset of her neurologic illness when (April of 1990 at her 59 years of the age) she was found to have an early cancer in her anterior wall of the lower stomach. Subtotal gastrectomy was performed and the operative result was reported as curative. Four years after the surgery (December of 1994 at her 64 years of the age), she noted suboccipital headache and nausea which had become progressively worse and she was admitted to our service on May 24, 1995. On admission, she appeared chronically ill but general physical examination was unremarkable with normal vital signs. Neurologically she was alert and not demented, and the higher cerebral functions were intact. Cranial nerves were also unremarkable. She was able to walk in tandem and on heels. No motor weakness or ataxia was noted. Deep tendon reflexes were moderately increased, however, no Babinski sign was noted. Although she had headache, no meningeal signs were seen. Slight superficial and vibratory sensory loss was noted in both feet. Routine blood work was again unremarkable except for slight increase in CEA to 8.3 ng/dl (N < 5 ng/dl). The opening pressure of lumbar CSF was 180 mm H2O and the CSF contained 39 cells/microliter, 79 mg of protein, and 10 mg/dl of glucose. Approximately half of the cells were atypical malignant cells. Plain CT was unremarkable, however, tentorial border showed enhancement after contrast infusion. FGS showed no malignant tumors in the stomach. She was treated with intravenous glycerol and whole brain radiation, however, she continued to complain of severe headache, and her sensorium started to be disturbed one month after the admission. Follow-up cranial CT scan revealed enlargement of the lateral and the third ventricles. Her consciousness progressively deteriorated and she became comatose three months after the admission. Repeated cranial CT scan showed enlargement of the ventricles, but no mass lesions were seen within the brain. She developed respiratory arrest on September 25 of the same year. She was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had a
gastric cancer
with meningeal seeding developing meningeal
carcinomatosis
. The cause of deep coma was ascribed to damage of cerebral cortical areas secondary to metastatic carcinoma cells and fibrinous materials in the surface of the brain. Postmortem examination revealed thickening and clouding of leptomeninges of the cerebral convexity. On histologic observation, patchy areas of fibrous thickening were seen in the cerebral leptomeninges; in such areas, adenocarcinomatous cells were seen scattered. The basal meninges were free of carcinoma cells, however, leptomeninges of the cerebellum and brain stem tegmentum contained scattered carcinoma cells. The lateral and the third ventricles were enlarged, however, insides of the brain were free of pathologies; the ependymal layer were intact. In the stomach no carcinoma cells were remaining. Pneumonic changes were seen in the right upper and the left lower lobes which appeared to be the direct cause of her death. No evidence of tentorial herniation was noted. The cause of her deep coma was not clearly determined, however, combination of hydrocephalus and cortical malfunction due to leptomeningeal carcinoma cell infiltration and fibrinous material accumulation appeared to have played a role.
...
PMID:[A 64-year-old woman with severe headache and progressive disturbance of consciousness]. 919 1
There is preliminary evidence from experience in the treatment of various abdominal malignancies that intraperitoneal chemotherapy alone or combined with hyperthermia may attain a role in the therapeutic strategy. This paper considers the rationale for such an approach, as well as its current results and potential indications in patients with
gastric cancer
. The literature is critically reviewed, with special emphasis on specific topics such as patterns of tumor spread, mechanisms of local recurrence, the rationale for intraperitoneal chemotherapy and intraperitoneal hyperthermic chemotherapy, toxicity, and results from non-controlled as well as randomized clinical trials in patients with
gastric cancer
. There is some evidence that intraperitoneal hyperthermic chemotherapy has a favorable effect on clinical outcome in patients with limited peritoneal
carcinomatosis
or malignant ascitis and in those at risk of future peritoneal spread, such as patients with pT3-pT4 cancers or with positive cytology of the peritoneal fluid. Hyperthermic chemotherapy should be considered a promising approach in limited or impending peritoneal
carcinomatosis
, and should be included in the multidisciplinary approach to the treatment of locally advanced
gastric cancer
.
...
PMID:Intraperitoneal hyperthermic chemotherapy in gastric cancer: rationale for a new approach. 982 1
Laparoscopy is a safe and useful method for examining the local extent and regional spread of disease in patients with
gastric cancer
. Peritoneal dissemination remains a frequent type of recurrence after surgical treatment. The aim of this study was to determine the prognostic value of intraperitoneal free cancer cells (IFCCs) detected by laparoscopic peritoneal lavage. Forty-nine patients with advanced
gastric cancer
underwent laparoscopy with cytologic examination for staging. Peritoneal lavage was performed when ascites was not present. Aspirated fluid from the peritoneal cavity was centrifuged and subjected to cytologic examination using Giemsa and Papanicolaou staining methods. Patients were surgically treated and followed for a minimum of 5 years. IFCCs were detected in 41% of the patients. In eight cases (16.3%) laparoscopy revealed
carcinomatosis
and/or multiple liver metastases, so laparotomy was not performed. Patterns of recurrence after curative resection included the following: peritoneal (n = 3), local (n = 4), liver (n = 1), and other (n = 1). All patients who tested positive for IFCCs had peritoneal recurrence. The absence of IFCCs was associated with improved overall survival (21 months for a 95% confidence interval of 7.4 to 34.6 vs. 4 months for a 95% confidence interval of 2.4 to 5.6). Overall survival adjusted for type of resection also demonstrated a favorable outcome for patients who were negative for IFCCs. The following conclusions were drawn: (1) laparoscopic peritoneal lavage cytology may be useful in identifying patients at high risk for peritoneal relapses and may alter treatment, and (2) lFCCs provide additional prognostic information in patients with
gastric cancer
.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of intraperitoneal free cancer cells obtained by laparoscopic peritoneal lavage in patients with gastric cancer. 984 81
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